The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

The Next Step in Galaxy Cluster Strong Lensing: Modeling the Surface Brightness of Multiply Imaged Sources

  • Ana Acebron,
  • Claudio Grillo,
  • Sherry H. Suyu,
  • Giuseppe Angora,
  • Pietro Bergamini,
  • Gabriel B. Caminha,
  • Sebastian Ertl,
  • Amata Mercurio,
  • Mario Nonino,
  • Piero Rosati,
  • Han Wang,
  • Andrea Bolamperti,
  • Massimo Meneghetti,
  • Stefan Schuldt,
  • Eros Vanzella

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad8343
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 976, no. 1
p. 110

Abstract

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Overcoming both modeling and computational challenges, we present, for the first time, the extended surface-brightness distribution model of a strongly lensed source in a complex galaxy-cluster-scale system. We exploit the high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging and extensive Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer spectroscopy to build an extended strong-lensing model, in a full multiplane formalism, of SDSS J1029+2623, a lens cluster at z = 0.588 with three multiple images of a background quasar ( z = 2.1992). Going beyond typical cluster strong-lensing modeling techniques, we include as observables both the positions of 26 pointlike multiple images from seven background sources, spanning a wide redshift range between 1.02 and 5.06, and the extended surface-brightness distribution of the strongly lensed quasar host galaxy, over ∼78,000 HST pixels. In addition, we model the light distribution of seven objects, angularly close to the strongly lensed quasar host, over ∼9300 HST pixels. Our extended lens model reproduces well both the observed intensity and morphology of the quasar host galaxy in the HST F160W band (with a 0.″03 pixel scale). The reconstructed source shows a single, compact, and smooth surface-brightness distribution, for which we estimate an intrinsic magnitude of 23.3 ± 0.1 in the F160W band and a half-light radius of (2.39 ± 0.03) kpc. The increased number of observables enables the accurate determination of the total mass of line-of-sight halos lying angularly close to the extended arc. This work paves the way for a new generation of galaxy cluster strong-lens models, where additional, complementary lensing observables are directly incorporated as model constraints.

Keywords