Discovery of an unusually compact lensed Lyman Break Galaxy from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey
Anton T. Jaelani, Anupreeta More, Alessandro Sonnenfeld, Masamune, Oguri, Cristian E. Rusu, Kenneth C. Wong, James H. H. Chan, Sherry H. Suyu,, Issha Kayo, Chien-Hsiu Lee, Kaiki T. Inoue

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of an unusually compact, quadruply-lensed Lyman Break Galaxy at high redshift, demonstrating the survey's capability to probe smaller galaxy sizes through gravitational lensing.
Contribution
The study presents the first detailed analysis of a highly compact lensed LBG, expanding the understanding of galaxy sizes at high redshift using the Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey.
Findings
The lens system confirms a high-redshift LBG at z=3.403.
The galaxy is unusually compact compared to typical LBGs.
The survey extends LBG size studies to smaller galaxies.
Abstract
We report the serendipitous discovery of HSC J09040102, a quadruply-lensed Lyman break galaxy (LBG) in the Survey of Gravitationally-lensed Objects in Hyper Suprime-Cam Imaging (SuGOHI). Owing to its point-like appearance, the source was thought to be a lensed active galactic nucleus. We obtained follow-up spectroscopic data with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrographs on the Gemini South Telescope, which confirmed this to be a lens system. The deflecting foreground galaxy is a typical early-type galaxy at a high redshift of with stellar velocity dispersion km~s. The lensed source is identified as an LBG at , based on the sharp drop bluewards of Ly and other absorption features. A simple lens mass model for the system, assuming a singular isothermal ellipsoid, yields an Einstein radius of $\theta_{\rm Ein} = 1.…
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