COOL-LAMPS IX: A Rare Duo of Quasars Each Lensed by a Single Massive Galaxy Cluster
Erik Solhaug, Michael D. Gladders, Andi M. Kisare, Simon D. Mork, Matthew B. Bayliss + 18 more
TLDR
Astronomers discovered COOLJ1153+0755, a rare system featuring two distinct quasars each quadruply lensed by a single massive galaxy cluster.
Key contributions
- Discovery of COOLJ1153+0755, the 8th wide-separation lensed quasar (WSLQ) system.
- Features two distinct quasars (Type I and Type II) quadruply lensed by a single z=0.43 cluster.
- Lens model provides cluster mass estimate and relative time delays for both lensed quasars.
- Identified without morphological cuts, demonstrating a new method for finding such complex systems.
Why it matters
This discovery significantly expands the rare sample of wide-separation lensed quasars, offering unique laboratories to study black hole-galaxy co-evolution at Cosmic Noon and refine Hubble constant measurements. The novel detection method also highlights a path to finding more such complex systems.
Original Abstract
Wide-separation lensed quasars (WSLQs) are rare systems that arise from the chance alignment of two objects: a galaxy cluster and a background quasar. After two decades, only seven WSLQs have been found. Here, we report the discovery of COOLJ1153+0755 by the COOL-LAMPS collaboration in DECaLS imaging and its confirmation with follow-up observations with the Magellan Telescopes and the Nordic Optical Telescope. This system features two multiply-imaged quasars each lensed into four images by the same $z=0.4301$ cluster: a classic broad-line Type I quasar at $z=1.524$ (COOLJ1153A) and a dust-obscured Type II quasar at $z=1.939$ (COOLJ1153B), with maximum image separations of $25.''6$ and $26.''0$, respectively. We construct a lens model to estimate a projected cluster mass of $M(<500\,{\rm kpc})\sim3.3\times10^{14}{\rm M}_{\odot}$ and relative time delays between the three brightest images of each quasar of $Δt_{\rm \,A3,A1}\sim800$, $Δt_{\rm \,A2,A1}\sim1200$, $Δt_{\rm \,B1,B3}\sim800$, and $Δt_{\rm \,B2,B3}\sim1000$ days. COOLJ1153A resides in a dense environment with three nearby galaxies, two of which are also strongly lensed. We identify COOLJ1153+0755 without making a morphological cut in the DECaLS catalog; none of its multiple images are classified as point sources in those data, implying that morphology-based selection would miss such systems. COOLJ1153+0755 expands the WSLQ sample from 7 to 8 systems (9 individual quasars), adding two powerful laboratories for probing black hole-galaxy co-evolution at Cosmic Noon and for time-delay cosmography constraints on the Hubble constant, $H_0$.
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