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Cluster gravitational lensing surveys like the Hubble Space Telescope Frontier Fields survey will detect distant galaxies 10-50 times fainter than any yet discovered. Using these surveys to measure the luminosity function of such faint, distant galaxies, however, requires that magnification maps built from the constraints of strongly-lensed images be accurate. For models that assume the cluster and nearby (correlated) structures are the only significant sources of lensing, a potential source of error in these maps comes from the fact that light rays also suffer weak deflections by uncorrelated large-scale structure along the line-of-sight, i.e. cosmic weak lensing (CWL). To demonstrate the magnitude of this effect, we calculate the magnification change which results when the same cluster-lens is placed along different lines of sight. Using a simple density profile for a cluster-lens at z~0.3-0.5 and the power spectrum of the matter density fluctuations responsible for CWL, we show that the typical magnifications of ~5(10) of sources at z=6-10 can differ by ~10-20(20-30)% from one line-of-sight to another. However, these fluctuations rise to greater than order unity near critical curves, indicating that CWL tends to make its greatest contribution to the most magnified images. We conclude that the neglect of CWL in determining the intrinsic luminosities of highly-magnified galaxies may introduce errors significant enough to warrant further effort to include this contribution in cluster-lens modeling. We suggest that methods of modeling CWL in galaxy-strong-lensing systems should be generalized to cluster-lensing systems.
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 introduce a technique to measure gravitational lensing magnification using the variability of type I quasars. Quasars variability amplitudes and luminosities are tightly correlated, on average. Magnification due to gravitational lensing increases
Measurements of the galaxy number density in upcoming surveys such as Euclid and the SKA will be sensitive to distortions from lensing magnification and Doppler effects, beyond the standard redshift-space distortions. The amplitude of these contribut
We present observations of redshifted CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) in a field containing an overdensity of Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) at z=5.12. Our Australia Telescope Compact Array observations were centered between two spectroscopically-confirmed z=5.12 g
A short overview is given on the development of our present paradigm of the large scale structure of the Universe with emphasis on the role of Ya. B. Zeldovich. Next we use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey data and show that the distribution of phases of