A Highly Magnified Gravitationally Lensed Red QSO at z = 2.5 with a Significant Flux Ratio Anomaly

Author:

Glikman EilatORCID,Rusu Cristian E.ORCID,Chen Geoff C.-F.ORCID,Chan James Hung-HsuORCID,Spingola CristianaORCID,Stacey HannahORCID,McKean John,Berghea Ciprian T.ORCID,Djorgovski S. G.ORCID,Graham Matthew J.ORCID,Stern DanielORCID,Urrutia TanyaORCID,Lacy MarkORCID,Secrest Nathan J.ORCID,O’Meara John M.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present the discovery of a gravitationally lensed dust-reddened QSO at z = 2.517, identified in a survey for QSOs by infrared selection. Hubble Space Telescope imaging reveals a quadruply lensed system in a cusp configuration, with a maximum image separation of ∼1.″8. We find that, compared to the central image of the cusp, the neighboring brightest image is anomalous by a factor of ∼7–10, which is the largest flux anomaly measured to date in a lensed QSO. Incorporating high-resolution Very Large Array radio imaging and submillimeter imaging with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, we conclude that a low-mass perturber is the most likely explanation for the anomaly. The optical through near-infrared spectrum reveals that the QSO is moderately reddened with E(BV) ≃ 0.7–0.9. We see an upturn in the ultraviolet spectrum due to ∼1% of the intrinsic emission being leaked back into the line of sight, which suggests that the reddening is intrinsic and not due to the lens. The QSO may have an Eddington ratio as high as L/L Edd ≈ 0.2. Consistent with previous red QSO samples, this source exhibits outflows in its spectrum, as well as morphological properties suggestive of it being in a merger-driven transitional phase. We find a host galaxy stellar mass of log M / M = 11.4 , which is higher than the local M BH versus M relation but consistent with other high-redshift QSOs. When demagnified, this QSO is at the knee of the luminosity function, allowing for the detailed study of a more typical moderate-luminosity infrared-selected QSO at high redshift.

Funder

Institutional funds from Middlebury College

NRAO page charge support

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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