论文标题
宇宙学纳米果通过密集的气云
Cosmological nanolensing by dense gas clouds
论文作者
论文摘要
我们研究了密集气云对遥远来源的宇宙学人群的影响,重点是类星体光学可变性。除了重力镜头外,此类云通过中性气体和粉尘灭绝会影响通量测量,即使在低光学深度极限下,也会导致各种可能的光曲线。我们对可能出现的光曲线的类型进行分类。对于像类星体一样大的来源,我们表明重力镜头和灭绝是主要的效果,气体折射只起次要的作用。我们发现具有质量〜10^{ - 4.5 +/- 0.5} m_ \ odot的云可以再现观测到的类星体变化振幅的分布,但前提是当这样的云占闭合密度的很大一部分时。在这种情况下,遥远的光源也可能存在大量灭绝,从原则上讲,这些光源可能会受到“标准蜡烛”(例如IA型超新星)的数据的约束。不幸的是,即使材料不透明度非常依赖于波长,因此灭绝基本上是灰色的,因此很难与背景几何形状的影响区分开。我们基于变异时间尺度的角度结构,针对大量分布在天空中的变异时间尺度的角度结构提出了对类星体变异性起源的新统计检验。如果类星体的可变性主要是由于纳米素化的,则预计角结构将包括振幅$ \ sim5 \%$的四倍项,这应该可以通过Gaia Mission的未来数据来衡量。
We study the influence of a cosmological population of dense gas clouds on distant sources, with emphasis on quasar optical variability. In addition to gravitational lensing such clouds affect flux measurements via refraction in the neutral gas and via dust extinction, leading to a variety of possible light curves even in the low optical depth limit. We classify and illustrate the types of light curves that can arise. For sources as large as quasars we show that gravitational lensing and extinction are the dominant effects, with gas refraction playing only a minor role. We find that clouds with mass ~10^{-4.5+/-0.5} M_\odot can reproduce the observed distribution of quasar variation amplitudes, but only if such clouds make up a large fraction of the closure density. In that case there may also be substantial extinction of distant optical sources, which can in principle be constrained by data on "standard candles" such as type Ia supernovae. Unfortunately that extinction is essentially grey, even when the material opacity is strongly wavelength dependent, making it difficult to distinguish from the influence of the background geometry. We propose a novel statistical test of the origin of quasar variability, based on the angular structure of the variation timescale for a large number of quasars distributed all over the sky. If quasar variability is primarily due to nanolensing that angular structure is expected to include a quadrupole term of amplitude $\sim5\%$, which ought to be measurable with future data from the Gaia mission.