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A bright, spatially extended lensed galaxy at z = 1.7 behind the cluster RCS2 032727-132623

Authors :
Wuyts, Eva
Barrientos, L. Felipe
Gladders, Michael D.
Sharon, Keren
Bayliss, Matthew B.
Carrasco, Mauricio
Gilbank, David
Yee, H. K. C.
Koester, Benjamin P.
Muñoz, Roberto
Source :
ApJ, 724 (2010) 1182-1192
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

We present the discovery of an extremely bright and extended lensed source from the second Red Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS2). RCSGA 032727-132609 is spectroscopically confirmed as a giant arc and counter-image of a background galaxy at $z=1.701$, strongly-lensed by the foreground galaxy cluster RCS2 032727-132623 at $z=0.564$. The giant arc extends over $\sim 38$\,\arcsec and has an integrated $g$-band magnitude of 19.15, making it $\sim 20$ times larger and $\sim 4$ times brighter than the prototypical lensed galaxy MS1512-cB58. This is the brightest distant lensed galaxy in the Universe known to date. Its location in the `redshift desert' provides unique opportunities to connect between the large samples of galaxies known at $z\sim3$ and $z\sim1$. We have collected photometry in 9 bands, ranging from $u$ to $K_s$, which densely sample the rest-frame UV and optical light, including the age-sensitive 4000\AA\ break. A lens model is constructed for the system, and results in a robust total magnification of $2.04 \pm 0.16$ for the counter-image; we estimate an average magnification of $17.2 \pm 1.4$ for the giant arc based on the relative physical scales of the arc and counter-image. Fits of single-component spectral energy distribution (SED) models to the photometry result in a moderately young age, $t = 115 \pm 65$\,Myr, small amounts of dust, $E(B-V) \le 0.035$, and an exponentially declining star formation history with \textit{e}-folding time $\tau = 10-100$\,Myr. After correcting for the lensing magnification, we find a stellar mass of $\log(\mathrm{M}/\mathrm{M}_\odot)=10.0 \pm 0.1$. Allowing for episodic star formation, an underlying old burst could contain up to twice the mass inferred from single-component modeling. This stellar mass estimate is consistent with the average stellar mass of a sample of `BM' galaxies ($1.4 < z < 2.0$) studied by Reddy et al. (2006).<br />Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, abstract abridged

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
ApJ, 724 (2010) 1182-1192
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1005.2621
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/724/2/1182