First JWST observations of a gravitational lens: Mass model from new multiple images with near-infrared observations of SMACS J0723.3-7327
G. B. Caminha, S. H. Suyu, A. Mercurio, G. Brammer, P. Bergamini, E., Vanzella, A. Acebron

TL;DR
This paper presents the first JWST-based gravitational lens model of SMACS J0723, improving mass estimates and predicting redshifts of new sources using near-infrared imaging and multiple image constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a refined lens mass model incorporating JWST data, doubling the constraints and enhancing accuracy over previous models.
Findings
Accurately reproduces multiple image positions with RMS errors of 0.39'' and 0.51''
Estimates total mass within 128 kpc as approximately 8.7×10^{13} solar masses
Identifies a high-redshift source at z>7.5 with significant magnification
Abstract
We present our lens mass model of SMACS J0723, the first strong gravitational lens observed by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). We use data from the Hubble Space Telescope and Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) to build our 'pre-JWST' lens model, and refine it with newly available JWST near-infrared imaging in our JWST model. To reproduce the positions of all multiple lensed images with good accuracy, the adopted mass parameterization consists of one cluster-scale component, accounting mainly for the dark matter distribution, the galaxy cluster members and an external shear component. The pre-JWST model has, as constraints, 19 multiple images from six background sources, of which four have secure spectroscopic redshift measurements from this work. The JWST model has more than twice the number of constraints, 30 additional multiple images from another eleven lensed sources.…
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