Abstract
The magnifications of the images in a strong gravitational lens system are sensitive to small mass clumps in the lens potential; this effect has been used to infer the amount of substructure in galaxy dark matter halos. I study the theory of substructure lensing to identify important general features and to compute analytic cross sections that will facilitate further theoretical studies. I show that the problem of a clump anywhere along the line of sight to a lens can be mapped onto an equivalent problem of a clump in a simple convergence and shear field; clumps at arbitrary redshifts are therefore not difficult to handle in calculations. For clumps modeled as singular isothermal spheres (SISs), I derive simple analytic estimates of the cross section for magnification perturbations of a given strength. The results yield two interesting conceptual points: First, lensed images with positive parity are always made brighter by SIS clumps; images with negative parity can be brightened but are much more likely to be dimmed. Second, the clumps need not lie within the lens galaxy; they can be moved in redshift by several tenths and still have a significant lensing effect. Isolated small halos are expected to be common in hierarchical structure formation models, but it is not yet known whether they are abundant enough compared to clumps inside lens galaxies to affect the interpretation of substructure lensing.
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