Near-IR search for lensed supernovae behind galaxy clusters: I. Observations and transient detection efficiency
V. Stanishev, A. Goobar, K. Paech, R. Amanullah, T. Dahl\'en, J., J\"onsson, J. P. Kneib, C. Lidman, M. Limousin, E. M\"ortsell, S. Nobili, J., Richard, T. Riehm, M. von Strauss

TL;DR
This study used near-infrared observations of galaxy clusters to detect gravitationally lensed supernovae, successfully identifying a highly magnified supernova behind Abell 1689, demonstrating the method's effectiveness.
Contribution
First near-infrared search for lensed supernovae behind galaxy clusters, showing feasibility and identifying a highly magnified supernova candidate.
Findings
Detected two transients, one likely a variable AGN, and another consistent with a reddened Type IIP supernova.
The supernova behind Abell 1689 is the most magnified supernova ever found.
The survey demonstrated the feasibility of discovering distant, gravitationally magnified supernovae.
Abstract
Massive galaxy clusters at intermediate redshift can magnify the flux of distant background sources by several magnitudes and we exploit this effect to search for lensed distant supernovae that may otherwise be too faint to be detected. A supernova search was conducted at near infrared wavelengths using the ISAAC instrument at the VLT. The galaxy clusters Abell 1689, Abell 1835 and AC114 were observed at multiple epochs of 2 hours of exposure time, separated by a month. Image-subtraction techniques were used to search for transient objects with light curve properties consistent with supernovae, both in our new and archival ISAAC/VLT data. The limiting magnitude of the individual epochs was estimated by adding artificial stars to the subtracted images. Most of the epochs reach 90% detection efficiency at SZ(J) ~= 23.8-24.0 mag (Vega). Two transient objects, both in archival images of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
