The Einstein ring GAL-CLUS-022058s: a Lensed Ultrabright Submillimeter Galaxy at z=1.4796
Abstract
We report an ultra-bright lensed submillimeter galaxy at zspec=1.4796, identified as a result of a full-sky cross-correlation of the AllWISE and Planck compact source catalogs aimed to search for bright submillimeter galaxies at z 1.5-2.8. APEX/LABOCA observations of the candidate galaxy reveal a source with flux (S870 μ m= 54 8 mJy). The position of the APEX source coincides with the position of the AllWISE mid-IR source, and with the Einstein ring GAL-CLUS-022058s, observed with the HST. Archival VLT/FORS observations reveal the redshift of this Einstein ring, zspec=1.4796, and detection of the CO(5-4) line at zspec = 1.4802 with APEX/nFLASH230 confirms the redshift of the submillimeter emission. The lensed source appears to be gravitationally magnified by a massive foreground galaxy cluster lens at z = 0.36. We use Lenstool to model the gravitational lensing, which is near to a "fold arc" configuration for an elliptical mass distribution of the central halo, where four images of the lensed galaxy are seen; the mean magnification is μ L =18 4. We have determined an intrinsic rest-frame infrared luminosity of LIR ≈ 1012 L and a likely star formation rate of 70-170 M\ yr-1. The molecular gas mass is Mmol 2.6 × 1010 M and the gas fraction is f = 0.34 0.07. We also obtain a stellar mass log(M/M) = 10.7 0.1 and a specific star formation rate log(sSFR/Gyr-1)=0.15 0.03. This galaxy lies on the so-called main sequence of star-forming galaxies at this redshift.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.