Discovery of the largest known lensed images formed by a critically convergent lensing cluster
Adi Zitrin, Tom Broadhurst

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the largest known lensed images by a galaxy cluster with a nearly uniform mass distribution, providing a powerful lens for observing distant galaxies and challenging some aspects of standard cosmology.
Contribution
It presents the identification and analysis of unusually large, minimally distorted lensed images caused by a critically convergent cluster with a uniform mass distribution, offering new insights into cluster lensing properties.
Findings
Largest known lensed images of a single galaxy identified
Cluster exhibits a nearly uniform mass distribution over 200 kpc
The lens acts like a magnifying glass with minimal distortion
Abstract
We identify the largest known lensed images of a single spiral galaxy, lying close to the centre of the distant cluster MACS J1149.5+2223 (). These images cover a total area of and are magnified times. Unusually, there is very little image distortion implying the central mass distribution is almost uniform over a wide area () with a surface density equal to the critical density for lensing, corresponding to maximal lens magnification. Many fainter multiply-lensed galaxies are also uncovered by our model, outlining a very large tangential critical curve, of radius , posing a potential challenge for the standard LCDM-Cosmology. Because of the uniform central mass distribution a particularly clean measurement of the mass of the brightest cluster galaxy is possible here, for which we infer stars contribute most…
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