3C 220.3: a radio galaxy lensing a submillimeter galaxy
Martin Haas, Christian Leipski, Peter Barthel, Belinda J. Wilkes,, Simona Vegetti, R. Shane Bussmann, S. P. Willner, Christian Westhues, Matthew, L. N. Ashby, Rolf Chini, David L. Clements, Christopher D. Fassnacht, Assaf, Horesh, Ulrich Klaas, Leon V. E. Koopmans

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a rare gravitational lensing event where a powerful radio galaxy acts as a lens for a background submillimeter galaxy, providing insights into dark matter and galaxy structure.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed lens model of a radio galaxy lensing a background galaxy without a galaxy cluster, revealing the dark matter content and the properties of the lensed galaxy.
Findings
Two-lens model fits all data
Dark matter fractions within Einstein radii are ~0.4 and ~0.55
The background galaxy is magnified by a factor of ~10
Abstract
Herschel Space Observatory photometry and extensive multiwavelength followup have revealed that the powerful radio galaxy 3C 220.3 at z=0.685 acts as a gravitational lens for a background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) at z=2.221. At an observed wavelength of 1mm, the SMG is lensed into three distinct images. In the observed near infrared, these images are connected by an arc of 1.8" radius forming an Einstein half-ring centered near the radio galaxy. In visible light, only the arc is apparent. 3C 220.3 is the only known instance of strong galaxy-scale lensing by a powerful radio galaxy not located in a galaxy cluster and therefore it offers the potential to probe the dark matter content of the radio galaxy host. Lens modeling rejects a single lens, but two lenses centered on the radio galaxy host A and a companion B, separated by 1.5", provide a fit consistent with all data and reveal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
