COSMOGRAIL: the COSmological MOnitoring of GRAvItational Lenses VII. Time delays and the Hubble constant from WFI J2033-4723
C. Vuissoz, F. Courbin, D. Sluse, G. Meylan, V. Chantry, E. Eulaers,, C. Morgan, M.E. Eyler, C.S. Kochanek, J. Coles, P. Saha, P. Magain, E.E., Falco

TL;DR
This study measures time delays in a gravitational lens system to estimate the Hubble constant, using extensive observational data and multiple modeling techniques, finding results consistent with the standard cosmological model.
Contribution
It provides new time delay measurements for WFI J2033-4723 and compares different lens models to estimate H0, demonstrating the impact of complex mass profiles and external shear.
Findings
Time delays Dt(B-A) = 35.5 days with 1.4 days uncertainty
Hubble constant estimated around 63-67 km s^-1 Mpc^-1
No evidence of microlensing variability over three years
Abstract
Gravitationally lensed quasars can be used to map the mass distribution in lensing galaxies and to estimate the Hubble constant H0 by measuring the time delays between the quasar images. Here we report the measurement of two independent time delays in the quadruply imaged quasar WFI J2033-4723 (z = 1.66). Our data consist of R-band images obtained with the Swiss 1.2 m EULER telescope located at La Silla and with the 1.3 m SMARTS telescope located at Cerro Tololo. The light curves have 218 independent epochs spanning 3 full years of monitoring between March 2004 and May 2007, with a mean temporal sampling of one observation every 4th day. We measure the time delays using three different techniques, and we obtain Dt(B-A) = 35.5 +- 1.4 days (3.8%) and Dt(B-C) = 62.6 +4.1/-2.3 days (+6.5%/-3.7%), where A is a composite of the close, merging image pair. After correcting for the time delays,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
