A Natural 100× Telescope: Discovery of the Strongly Lensed Type II SN 2025mkn at z=1.37

Abstract

We present the discovery of SN 2025mkn, a gravitationally lensed Type II supernova. First detected as a blue transient in ZTF, 0.83 from a z=0.42 elliptical galaxy, follow-up SNIFS/UH2.2m and LRIS/Keck spectra revealed absorption lines at z=1.371. Later JWST NIRCam imaging shows that the bright transient is a close pair of point sources separated by 0.07, and a 30 times fainter counterimage opposite the lens, for which NIRSpec reveals strong Hα emission also at z=1.371. The light curves and spectra are consistent with the Type II supernova source being magnified 100 times, with 250 required to reconcile its luminosity with that of nearby events such as SN 2023ixf. Lens models are consistent with such high magnifications, and always show that the faint image arrived first (undetected in earlier ZTF imaging), consistent with the later spectral phase of this fainter image. A fourth image is also predicted and possibly detected in the NIRSpec data. Light-curve-based time-delay measurements are not possible due to the first image being the faintest; however, the resolved NIRSpec spectra offer a future opportunity for time-delay cosmography through supernova phase measurements.

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