ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Due to the finite size of the disk and the temperature fluctuations producing the variability, microlensing changes the actual time delays between images of strongly lensed AGN on the $sim$day(s) light-crossing time scale of the emission region. This microlensing-induced time delay depends on the disk model, primarily the disk size $R_mathrm{disk}$ which has been found to be larger than predicted by the thin-disk model. In this work, we propose that light curves measured in different bands will give different time delays since $R_mathrm{disk}$ is a function of wavelength, and by measuring the time delay differences between bands, one can 1) directly verify such an new effect; 2) test the thin-disk model of quasars. For the second goal, our method can avoid the potential inconsistency between multi-band light curves that may bias the results by continuum reverberation mapping. We conduct a simulation based on a PG 1115+080-like lensed quasar, calculating the theoretical distributions of time delay differences between two bands: u and i centered around 354nm and 780nm, under and beyond the thin-disk model, respectively. Assuming the disk size is twice larger than the standard one, we find that with a precision of 2 days in the time delay difference measurements, the microlensing time delay effect can be verified with $sim4$ measurements while with $sim35$ measurements the standard model can be excluded. This approach could be realized in the ongoing and upcoming multi-band wide-field surveys with follow-up observations.
Time-delay strong lensing provides a unique way to directly measure the Hubble constant ($H_{0}$). The precision of the $H_{0}$ measurement depends on the uncertainties in the time-delay measurements, the mass distribution of the main deflector(s), a
We present 13 seasons of $R$-band photometry of the quadruply-lensed quasar WFI 2033-4723 from the 1.3m SMARTS telescope at CTIO and the 1.2m Euler Swiss Telescope at La Silla, in which we detect microlensing variability of $sim0.2$ mags on a timesca
Owing to the advent of large area photometric surveys, the possibility to use broad band photometric data, instead of spectra, to measure the size of the broad line region of active galactic nuclei, has raised a large interest. We describe here a new
The Hubble constant value is currently known to 10% accuracy unless assumptions are made for the cosmology (Sandage et al. 2006). Gravitational lens systems provide another probe of the Hubble constant using time delay measurements. However, current
In principle, the most straightforward method of estimating the Hubble constant relies on time delays between mirage images of strongly-lensed sources. It is a puzzle, then, that the values of H0 obtained with this method span a range from 50 - 100 k