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P2 |
March 1997
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To be published in:
New Astronomy
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Gravitational Lensing by Damped Ly- Absorbers
A. Smette1,
J.-F. Claeskens2,* and
J. Surdej2,3,**,***
1 Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Postbus 800, NL-9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands
2 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Avenue de Cointe 5, 4000 Liège, Belgium
3 Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Drive, Baltimore MD 21218, USA
* Aspirant FNRS, Belgium
** Presently member of the Astrophysics Division, Space Science Department of the European Space Agency
*** Directeur de Recherches FNRS, Belgium
Assuming that (i) damped Ly- absorbers
(DLAs) arise in present-day-like spiral galaxies which are immersed in
isothermal dark matter halos, (ii) that the galaxies obey the Tully-Fisher
/* = (L/L*)1/TF
and the Holmberg
RL/R* = (L/L*)H
relations, and (iii) that they follow the Schechter luminosity
distribution, we describe how their observed number density
(dN/dz), distribution of column density (f(N))
as well as inferred cosmological density of HI
(HI)
derived from DLA surveys are affected by gravitational lensing (GL).
The 'by-pass' effect causes the lines-of-sight (LOSs) towards background
QSOs to avoid the central parts of galaxies and reduces their effective
cross-section for absorption; the 'amplification bias' leads observers
to select QSOs whose LOSs preferentially cross galaxies close to their
Einstein radius. As a consequence, the determination of the quantities
dN/dz, f(N)) and
HI
from DLA surveys does not only depend on the redshift z and
luminosity L of galaxies respondible for the absorbers but also
on the column density profile of HI within the
galaxies and on the redshift zq and magnitude
bq of the background QSOs.
For most of the existing surveys using
bq 19 QSOs,
the amplification bias dominates the combined effect resulting in a
slight overestimate of dN/dz, f(N)) and
HI.
We mainly find that observational stategies presently used to produce
high-z DLA surveys result in avoiding the signature of significant
GL effects: following our model, we determine that an overestimate of
HI by
more than 10% is unlikely for the z > 1.7 existing
surveys, but may reach ~35% for the low redshift ones.
However, we
show that, in the absence of extinction by dust and micro-lensing effects,
surveys ideally designed to enhance GL effects, i.e. to search for DLAs
at z ~ 0.5 in front of very bright
(bq ~ 16), high-z
(zq > 1) QSOs, may lead 1) to overestimate
by up to ~90% the number of DLAs per unit redshift; 2) to bias the survey
towards high HI column density systems so that it
could contain up to 4 times as many such sysems, thus 3) to overestimate
by up to ~170% the cosmological density of gas associated with those
DLAs. Identification of the galaxies respondible for the DLAs may be
severely biased towards luminous galaxies if
2/TF - H > 0;
this latter effect is greatly increased for
logNHI > 21 DLAs.
Hence, GL effects on the quantities derived from surveys for z~0.5
DLAs are of the same order, but of opposite direction, as the effects of
extinction by dust (cf. Fall & Pei, 1993 [ApJ, 402,479]). However, the GL
and dust extinction effects do not compensate each other: combining them
in a consistent way is necessary to interpret existing DLA surveys.
Furthermore, the effects due to micro-lensing shoul be simultaneously
taken into account. We intend to report the results on the complex
interplay between macro-lensing, micro-lensing and dust in a
subsequent paper.
We briefly present statistical tests specifically designed to check
whether GL affects existing DLA surveys, and assuming that extinction by
dust is negligible. We only find indications of GL effects for the
z < 1 ones which, if confirmed, might even be stronger
than predicted by our model.
We show that an independent work on the same subject by Bartelmann &
Loeb (1996) [ApJ, 457,529] incorrectly treats the inclination effects for
the intervening galaxies, thus undermining some of their main results
and conclusions.
Galaxies: evolution; Gravitational lensing; Quasars: absorption lines
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