Bibcode
DOI
Mediavilla, E.; Muñoz, J. A.; Lopez, P.; Mediavilla, T.; Abajas, C.; Gonzalez-Morcillo, C.; Gil-Merino, R.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 653, Issue 2, pp. 942-953.
Advertised on:
12
2006
Journal
Citations
66
Refereed citations
63
Description
A new method of calculating microlensing magnification patterns is
proposed that is based on the properties of the backward gravitational
lens mapping of a lattice of polygonal cells defined at the image plane.
To a first-order approximation, the local linearity of the
transformation allows us to compute the contribution of each image-plane
cell to the magnification by apportioning the area of the inverse image
of the cell (transformed cell) among the source-plane pixels covered by
it. Numerical studies in the κ=0.1-0.8 range of mass surface
densities demonstrate that this method (provided with an exact algorithm
for distributing the area of the transformed cells among the
source-plane pixels) is more efficient than the inverse ray-shooting
technique (IRS). Magnification patterns with relative errors of
~5×10-4 are obtained with an image-plane lattice of
only 1 ray per unlensed pixel. This accuracy is, in practice, beyond the
reach of IRS performance (more than 10,000 rays should be collected per
pixel to achieve this result with the IRS) and is obtained in a small
fraction (less than 4%) of the computing time that is used by the IRS
technique to achieve an error more than an order of magnitude larger.
The computing time for the new method is reduced to below 1% of the IRS
computing time when the same accuracy is required of both methods. We
have also studied the second-order approximation to control departures
from linearity that could induce variations in the magnification within
the boundaries of a transformed cell. This approximation is used to
identify and control the cells enclosing a critical curve.