Eva Eulaers, Pierre Magain
We test the robustness of published time delays for 11 lensed quasars by
using two techniques to measure time shifts in their light curves.
We chose to use two fundamentally different techniques to determine time
delays in gravitationally lensed quasars: a method based on fitting a numerical
model and another one derived from the minimum dispersion method introduced by
Pelt and collaborators. To analyse our sample in a homogeneous way and avoid
bias caused by the choice of the method used, we apply both methods to 11
different lensed systems for which delays have been published: JVAS B0218+357,
SBS 0909+523, RX J0911+0551, FBQS J0951+2635, HE 1104-1805, PG 1115+080, JVAS
B1422+231, SBS 1520+530, CLASS B1600+434, CLASS B1608+656, and HE 2149-2745
Time delays for three double lenses, JVAS B0218+357, HE 1104-1805, and CLASS
B1600+434, as well as the quadruply lensed quasar CLASS B1608+656 are confirmed
within the error bars. We correct the delay for SBS 1520+530. For PG 1115+080
and RX J0911+0551, the existence of a second solution on top of the published
delay is revealed. The time delays in four systems, SBS 0909+523, FBQS
J0951+2635, JVAS B1422+231, and HE 2149-2745 prove to be less reliable than
previously claimed.
If we wish to derive an estimate of H_0 based on time delays in
gravitationally lensed quasars, we need to obtain more robust light curves for
most of these systems in order to achieve a higher accuracy and robustness on
the time delays.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.2609
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