David J. Rusin, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2001 | University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States |
Area:
Astronomy and AstrophysicsGoogle:
"David Rusin"Mean distance: 15.82
Parents
Sign in to add mentorMax E. Tegmark | grad student | 2001 | Penn | |
(Studies of gravitational lens systems discovered in the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey.) |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
York T, Jackson N, Browne IWA, et al. (2005) Class B0631+519: Last of the cosmic lens all-sky survey lenses Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 361: 259-271 |
McKean JP, Browne IWA, Jackson NJ, et al. (2005) CLASS B2108+213: A new wide-separation gravitational lens system Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 356: 1009-1016 |
Rusin D, Keeton CR, Winn JN. (2005) Measuring supermassive black holes in distant galaxies with central lensed images Astrophysical Journal. 627 |
Rusin D, Kochanek CS. (2005) The evolution and structure of early-type field galaxies: A combined statistical analysis of gravitational lenses Astrophysical Journal. 623: 666-682 |
Winn JN, Rusin D, Kochanek CS. (2004) The central image of a gravitationally lensed quasar. Nature. 427: 613-5 |
Rusin D, Norbury M, Biggs AD, et al. (2002) High-resolution observations and mass modelling of the CLASS gravitational lens B1152+199 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 330: 205-211 |
Sarbu N, Rusin D, Ma C. (2001) Strong Gravitational Lensing and Dark Energy The Astrophysical Journal. 561: L147-L151 |
Rusin D, Kochanek CS, Norbury M, et al. (2001) B1359 + 154: A six-image lens produced by a z ≃ 1 compact group of galaxies Astrophysical Journal. 557: 594-604 |
Rusin D, Marlow DR, Norbury M, et al. (2001) The new two-image gravitational lens system class B2319+051 Astronomical Journal. 122: 591-597 |
Rusin D, Tegmark M. (2001) Why Is the Fraction of Four‐Image Radio Lens Systems So High? The Astrophysical Journal. 553: 709-721 |