Quasar lenses and pairs in the VST-ATLAS and Gaia
Abstract
We report on discovery results from a quasar lens search in the ATLAS public footprint, extending quasar lens searches to a regime without u-band or fiber-spectroscopic information, using a combination of data mining techniques on multi-band catalog magnitudes and image-cutout modelling. Spectroscopic follow-up campaigns, conducted at the 2.6m Nordic Optical Telescope (La Palma) and 3.6m New Technology Telescope (La Silla) in 2016, yielded seven pairs of quasars exhibiting the same lines at the same redshift and monotonic flux-ratios with wavelength (hereafter NIQs, Nearly Identical Quasar pairs). The quasar redshifts range between ≈1.2 and ≈ 2.7; contaminants are typically pairs of bright blue stars, quasar-star alignments along the line of sight, and narrow-line galaxies at 0.3<z<0.7. Magellan data of A0140-1152 (01h40m03.0s-11d52m19.0s, zs=1.807) confirm it as a lens with deflector at zl=0.277 and Einstein radius θ E=(0.730.02). We show the use of spatial resolution from the Gaia mission to select lenses and list additional systems from a WISE-Gaia-ATLAS search, yielding three additional lenses (02h35m27.4s-24d33m13.2s, 02h59m33.s-23d38m01.8s, 01h46m32.9s-11d33m39.0s). The overall sample consists of 11 lenses/NIQs, plus three lenses known before 2016, over the ATLAS-DR3 footprint (≈3500~deg2). Finally, we discuss future prospects for objective classification of pair/NIQ/contaminant spectra.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.