The Flat‐Spectrum Radio Luminosity Function, Gravitational Lensing, Galaxy Ellipticities, and Cosmology
Open Access
- 20 December 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 473 (2) , 595-609
- https://doi.org/10.1086/178175
Abstract
The number of lenses found in the JVAS survey of flat-spectrum radio sources for gravitational lenses is consistent with statistical models of optical surveys for lensed quasars. The 90% confidence limit on Ω0 in flat cosmological models (Ω0 + λ0 = 1) is approximately 0.15 Ω0 2. Depending on the RLF model, we predict 2.40-3.6 lenses in the JVAS survey and in the first paper part of the fainter CLASS survey and 0.3-:0.6 lenses in the brighter PHFS survey for an Ω0 = 1 model. The uncertainties are because of the small numbers of lenses (there are only 4 compact JVAS lenses) and the uncertainties in the radio luminosity function (RLF) caused by the lack of information on the redshift distribution of 10-300 mJy radio sources. If we force the models to produce the observed number of JVAS lenses, the mean redshift of a 50 mJy source varies from zs = 0.4 for Ω0 = 0, to 1.9 for Ω0 = 1, to almost 4.0 for Ω0 = 2 when Ω0+ λ0 = 1. The source fluxes and redshifts of the lenses in the JVAS and CLASS surveys are consistent with the statistical models. The numbers of four-image lenses found in the JVAS survey and in surveys for lensed quasars are mutually consistent but slightly larger than expected for models using the observed axis ratios of E and S0 galaxies. The best fits to the lens data require a projected axis ratio of b/a = 0.50 with a 90% confidence range of 0.25 < b/a < 0.65.Keywords
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