Near-IR Search for Lensed Supernovae Behind Galaxy Clusters - II. First Detection and Future Prospects
A.Goobar, K.Paech, V.Stanishev, R.Amanullah, T.Dahlen, J.Jonsson,, J.P.Kneib, C.Lidman, M.Limousin, E.Mortsell, S.Nobili, J.Richard, T.Riehm,, M.von Strauss

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the feasibility of detecting lensed supernovae behind galaxy clusters using near-IR observations, with one candidate identified and future prospects for such searches discussed.
Contribution
First detection of a lensed supernova in a near-IR survey behind galaxy clusters, showing the potential of gravitational telescopes for supernova discovery.
Findings
One transient consistent with a lensed Type IIP SN was found.
Predicted 0.8 to 1.6 supernovae expected in the survey.
Lensing magnification enabled detection of a faint supernova.
Abstract
Powerful gravitational telescopes in the form of massive galaxy clusters can be used to enhance the light collecting power over a limited field of view by about an order of magnitude in flux. This effect is exploited here to increase the depth of a survey for lensed supernovae at near-IR wavelengths. A pilot SN search program conducted with the ISAAC camera at VLT is presented. Lensed galaxies behind the massive clusters A1689, A1835 and AC114 were observed for a total of 20 hours split into 2, 3 and 4 epochs respectively, separated by approximately one month to a limiting magnitude J<24 (Vega). Image subtractions including another 20 hours worth of archival ISAAC/VLT data were used to search for transients with lightcurve properties consistent with redshifted supernovae, both in the new and reference data. The feasibility of finding lensed supernovae in our survey was investigated…
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