VLBA observations of a rare multiple quasar imaging event caused by refraction in the interstellar medium
A.B. Pushkarev, Y.Y. Kovalev, M.L. Lister, T. Hovatta, T. Savolainen,, M.F. Aller, H.D. Aller, E. Ros, J.A. Zensus, J.L. Richards, W. Max-Moerbeck,, A.C.S. Readhead

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct observation of multiple imaging of a quasar caused by interstellar plasma lensing, revealing detailed properties of the plasma lens and its effects across multiple frequencies.
Contribution
It provides the first detection and modeling of a plasma lens-induced multiple imaging event in a quasar, including lens structure, motion, and scattering characteristics.
Findings
Detected multiple images of quasar 2023+335 during an ESE.
Modeled the plasma lens as a double-lens structure with specific size and motion.
Found wavelength-dependent angular size consistent with plasma scattering.
Abstract
We report on the first detection of the theoretically-predicted rare phenomenon of multiple parsec-scale imaging of an active galactic nucleus induced by refractive effects due to localized foreground electron density enhancements, e.g., in an AU-scale plasma lens(es) in the ionized component of the Galactic interstellar medium. We detected multiple imaging in the low galactic latitude (b=-2 deg) quasar 2023+335 from the 15.4 GHz MOJAVE observations when the source was undergoing an ESE. While the parsec-scale jet of the source normally extends along PA -20 deg, in the 28 May 2009 and 23 July 2009 images a highly significant multi-component pattern of secondary images is stretched out nearly along the constant galactic latitude line with a local PA 40 deg, indicating that the direction of relative motion of the plasma lens is close to orbital. Weaker but still detectable imaging…
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