20–27 Mar 2026
Wild View Resorts
Africa/Gaborone timezone

Testing models for dark matter with extremely high angular resolution imaging of galaxy-scale gravitational lenses

23 Mar 2026, 16:15
15m
Wild View Resorts

Wild View Resorts

Plot 80 President Avenue, Kasane, Botswana
In-person - Talk 1 Cosmology Science & Engineering

Speaker

John McKean (University of Pretoria)

Description

Gravitational lensing provides a powerful probe of the global mass properties of galaxies, which are best tested using observations at extremely high angular resolution. In addition, through detailed observations of the lensed images, it is possible to place tight constraints on the nature of dark matter through measuring the abundance and properties of low mass haloes via their subtle gravitational lensing signal. Here, we first present new observations with the Very Large Array (VLA) and High Sensitivity Array (HSA) to better understand the source of so-called flux-ratio anomalies in four image gravitational lenses, which historically provided the first constraints on CDM using lensing studies. Next, we will present the analysis of the mass properties of ten massive elliptical galaxies at intermediate redshifts, by combining gravitational lensing and the sensitivity and resolving power of the Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA) and global Very Long Baseline Interferometry (radio VLBI). Using imaging at 25 to a few milli-arcsecond resolution, we find that complex mass models with angular structure are strongly favoured by the data. In addition, such observations are sensitive to small-scale structure either in the lens or along the line-of-sight to the background source. From such an analysis of the data from global VLBI observations, we detect of a low mass (million solar mass) dark object, whose properties are inconsistent with a dark matter halo from either cold or warm dark matter models, but may be in agreement with more exotic models, like self-interacting dark matter. Finally, we present a brief overview of future studies using a likely African VLBI facility.

Stream Science or Engineering

Primary author

John McKean (University of Pretoria)

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