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Discovery of two gravitationally lensed quasars in the Dark Energy Survey

Authors :
Agnello, Adriano
Treu, Tommaso
Ostrovski, Fernanda
Schechter, Paul L.
Buckley-Geer, Elizabeth J.
Lin, Huan
Auger, Matthew W.
Courbin, Frederic
Fassnacht, Christopher D.
Frieman, Josh
Kuropatkin, Nikolay
Marshall, Philip J.
McMahon, Richard G.
Meylan, Georges
More, Anupreeta
Suyu, Sherry H.
Rusu, Cristian E.
Finley, David
Abbott, Tim
Abdalla, Filipe B.
Allam, Sahar
Annis, James
Banerji, Manda
Benoit-Lévy, Aurélien
Bertin, Emmanuel
Brooks, David
Burke, David L.
Rosell, Aurelio Carnero
Kind, Matias Carrasco
Carretero, Jorge
Cunha, Carlos E.
D'Andrea, Chris B.
da Costa, Luiz N.
Desai, Shantanu
Diehl, H. Thomas
Dietrich, Jörg P.
Doel, Peter
Eifler, Tim F.
Estrada, Juan
Neto, Angelo Fausti
Flaugher, Brenna
Fosalba, Pablo
Gerdes, David W.
Gruen, Daniel
Gutierrez, Gaston
Honscheid, Klaus
James, David J.
Kuehn, Kyler
Lahav, Ofer
Lima, Marco
Maia, Marcio A. G.
March, Marina
Marshall, Jennifer L.
Martini, Paul
Melchior, Peter
Miller, Christopher J.
Miquel, Ramon
Nichol, Robert C.
Ogando, Ricardo
Plazas, Andres A.
Reil, Kevin
Romer, A. Kathy
Roodman, Aaron
Sako, Masao
Sanchez, Eusebio
Santiago, Basilio
Scarpine, Vic
Schubnell, Michael
Sevilla-Noarbe, Ignacio
Smith, R. Chris
Soares-Santos, Marcelle
Sobreira, Flavia
Suchyta, Eric
Swanson, Molly E. C.
Tarle, Gregory
Thaler, Jon
Tucker, Douglas
Walker, Alistair R.
Wechsler, Risa H.
Zhang, Yuanyuan
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We present spectroscopic confirmation of two new lensed quasars via data obtained at the 6.5m Magellan/Baade Telescope. The lens candidates have been selected from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and WISE based on their multi-band photometry and extended morphology in DES images. Images of DES J0115-5244 show two blue point sources at either side of a red galaxy. Our long-slit data confirm that both point sources are images of the same quasar at $z_{s}=1.64.$ The Einstein Radius estimated from the DES images is $0.51$". DES J2200+0110 is in the area of overlap between DES and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Two blue components are visible in the DES and SDSS images. The SDSS fiber spectrum shows a quasar component at $z_{s}=2.38$ and absorption compatible with Mg II and Fe II at $z_{l}=0.799$, which we tentatively associate with the foreground lens galaxy. The long-slit Magellan spectra show that the blue components are resolved images of the same quasar. The Einstein Radius is $0.68$" corresponding to an enclosed mass of $1.6\times10^{11}\,M_{\odot}.$ Three other candidates were observed and rejected, two being low-redshift pairs of starburst galaxies, and one being a quasar behind a blue star. These first confirmation results provide an important empirical validation of the data-mining and model-based selection that is being applied to the entire DES dataset.<br />Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, MNRAS subm. This paper includes data gathered with the 6.5m Baade Telescopes located at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile. This paper has gone through internal review by the DES collaboration, FERMILAB-PUB-15-341-AE

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1508.01203
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2171