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We demonstrate that the maximum-entropy method for gravitational lens reconstruction presented in Bridle et al. (1998) may be applied even when only shear emph{or} magnification information is present. We also demonstrate that the method can easily handle irregularly shaped observing fields and, because shear is a non-local function of the lensing mass, reconstructions that use shear information can successfully bridge small gaps in observations. For our simulations we use a mass density distribution that is realistic for a z=0.4 cluster of total mass around 10^15 h^-1 M_solar. Using HST-quality shear data alone, covering the area of four WFPC2 observations, we detect 60 per cent of the mass of the cluster within the area observed, despite the mass sheet degeneracy. This is qualitatively because the shear provides information about the variations in the mass distribution, and our prior includes a positivity constraint. We investigate the effect of using various sizes of observing field and find that 50 to 100 per cent of the cluster mass is detected, depending on the observing strategy and cluster shape. Finally we demonstrate how this method can cope with strong lensing regions of a mass distribution.
Many distant objects can only be detected, or become more scientifically valuable, if they have been highly magnified by strong gravitational lensing. We use EAGLE and BAHAMAS, two recent cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, to predict the probab
We present the analysis of the light curves of 9 high-magnification single-lens gravitational microlensing events with lenses passing over source stars, including OGLE-2004-BLG-254, MOA-2007-BLG-176, MOA-2007-BLG-233/OGLE-2007-BLG-302, MOA-2009-BLG-1
Using new photometric and spectroscopic data in the fields of nine strong gravitational lenses that lie in galaxy groups, we analyze the effects of both the local group environment and line-of-sight galaxies on the lens potential. We use Monte Carlo
We have developed a technique to map the three-dimensional structure of the local interstellar medium using a maximum entropy reconstruction technique. A set of column densities N to stars of known distance can in principle be used to recover a three
The classical problem of moments is addressed by the maximum entropy approach for one-dimensional discrete distributions. The numerical technique of adaptive support approximation is proposed to reconstruct the distributions in the region where the main part of probability mass is located.