Uncovering a population of gravitational lens galaxies with magnified standard candle SN Zwicky

Author:

Goobar ArielORCID,Johansson Joel,Schulze SteveORCID,Arendse Nikki,Carracedo Ana SaguésORCID,Dhawan Suhail,Mörtsell Edvard,Fremling ChristofferORCID,Yan Lin,Perley Daniel,Sollerman JesperORCID,Joseph Rémy,Hinds K-Ryan,Meynardie William,Andreoni Igor,Bellm EricORCID,Bloom Josh,Collett Thomas E.ORCID,Drake Andrew,Graham MatthewORCID,Kasliwal Mansi,Kulkarni Shri R.,Lemon Cameron,Miller Adam A.ORCID,Neill James D.ORCID,Nordin JakobORCID,Pierel Justin,Richard Johan,Riddle ReedORCID,Rigault MickaelORCID,Rusholme BenORCID,Sharma Yashvi,Stein Robert,Stewart Gabrielle,Townsend AliceORCID,Vinko Jozsef,Wheeler J. Craig,Wold AveryORCID

Abstract

AbstractDetecting gravitationally lensed supernovae is among the biggest challenges in astronomy. It involves a combination of two very rare phenomena: catching the transient signal of a stellar explosion in a distant galaxy and observing it through a nearly perfectly aligned foreground galaxy that deflects light towards the observer. Here we describe how high-cadence optical observations with the Zwicky Transient Facility, with its unparalleled large field of view, led to the detection of a multiply imaged type Ia supernova, SN Zwicky, also known as SN 2022qmx. Magnified nearly 25-fold, the system was found thanks to the standard candle nature of type Ia supernovae. High-spatial-resolution imaging with the Keck telescope resolved four images of the supernova with very small angular separation, corresponding to an Einstein radius of only θE = 0.167″ and almost identical arrival times. The small θE and faintness of the lensing galaxy are very unusual, highlighting the importance of supernovae to fully characterize the properties of galaxy-scale gravitational lenses, including the impact of galaxy substructures.

Funder

European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Astronomy and Astrophysics

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