The preferentially magnified active nucleus in IRAS F10214+4724 - III. VLBI observations of the radio core
R.P. Deane, S. Rawlings, M.A. Garrett, I. Heywood, M.J. Jarvis, H.-R., Kl\"ockner, P.J. Marshall, J.P. McKean

TL;DR
This study uses VLBI observations to pinpoint the obscured active nucleus in IRAS F10214+4724, revealing extreme gravitational magnification effects that influence our understanding of high-redshift lensed galaxies.
Contribution
First VLBI detection of the obscured nucleus in IRAS F10214+4724, demonstrating significant differential magnification effects in gravitational lensing.
Findings
Detected the active nucleus with high magnification (~70).
Estimated the black hole mass as 10^8.36 solar masses.
Found the galaxy's black hole to spheroid mass ratio much higher than typical SMGs.
Abstract
We report 1.7 GHz Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations of IRAS F10214+4724, a lensed z=2.3 obscured quasar with prodigious star formation. We detect what we argue to be the obscured active nucleus with an effective angular resolution of < 50 pc at z = 2.3 . The S_{1.7} = 210 micro-Jy (9-\sigma) detection of this unresolved source is located within the HST rest-frame ultraviolet/optical arc, however, >~100 mas northward of the arc centre of curvature. This leads to a source plane inversion that places the European VLBI Network detection to within milli-arcseconds of the modelled cusp caustic, resulting in a very large magnification (\mu ~70), over an order of magnitude larger than the CO (1-0) derived magnification of a spatially resolved JVLA map, using the same lens model. We estimate the quasar bolometric luminosity from a number of independent techniques and with our…
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