# A variable active galactic nucleus at $z=2.06$ triply-imaged by the   galaxy cluster MACS J0035.4-2015

**Authors:** Lukas J. Furtak, Ramesh Mainali, Adi Zitrin, Ad\`ele Plat, Seiji, Fujimoto, Megan Donahue, Erica J. Nelson, Franz E. Bauer, Ryosuke Uematsu,, Gabriel B. Caminha, Felipe Andrade-Santos, Larry D. Bradley, Karina I., Caputi, St\'ephane Charlot, Jacopo Chevallard, Dan Coe, Emma Curtis-Lake,, Daniel Espada, Brenda L. Frye, Kirsten K. Knudsen, Anton M. Koekemoer, Kotaro, Kohno, Vasily Kokorev, Nicolas Laporte, Minju M. Lee, Brian C. Lemaux,, Georgios E. Magdis, Keren Sharon, Daniel P. Stark, Yuanyuan Su, Katherine A., Suess, Yoshihiro Ueda, Hideki Umehata, Alba Vidal-Garc\'ia, John F. Wu

arXiv: 2303.00025 · 2023-05-16

## TL;DR

This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a triply-imaged active galactic nucleus at redshift 2.06, lensed by a galaxy cluster, providing insights into its properties, lensing effects, and variability.

## Contribution

It presents the first detailed study of a triply-imaged AGN at this redshift, including lens modeling, physical characterization, and evidence of variability, expanding knowledge of lensed high-redshift AGN.

## Key findings

- Confirmed AGN at z=2.06 with broad UV emission lines
- Measured lens magnifications and time delays
- Detected variability suggesting past higher activity

## Abstract

We report the discovery of a triply imaged active galactic nucleus (AGN), lensed by the galaxy cluster MACS J0035.4-2015 ($z_{\mathrm{d}}=0.352$). The object is detected in Hubble Space Telescope imaging taken for the RELICS program. It appears to have a quasi-stellar nucleus consistent with a point-source, with a de-magnified radius of $r_e\lesssim100$ pc. The object is spectroscopically confirmed to be an AGN at $z_{\mathrm{spec}}=2.063\pm0.005$ showing broad rest-frame UV emission lines, and is detected in both X-ray observations with Chandra and in ALCS ALMA band 6 (1.2 mm) imaging. It has a relatively faint rest-frame UV luminosity for a quasar-like object, $M_{\mathrm{UV},1450}=-19.7\pm0.2$. The object adds to just a few quasars or other X-ray sources known to be multiply lensed by a galaxy cluster. Some diffuse emission from the host galaxy is faintly seen around the nucleus and there is a faint object nearby sharing the same multiple-imaging symmetry and geometric redshift, possibly an interacting galaxy or a star-forming knot in the host. We present an accompanying lens model, calculate the magnifications and time delays, and infer physical properties for the source. We find the rest-frame UV continuum and emission lines to be dominated by the AGN, and the optical emission to be dominated by the host galaxy of modest stellar mass $M_{\star}\simeq10^{9.2} \mathrm{M}_{\odot}$. We also observe some variation in the AGN emission with time, which may suggest that the AGN used to be more active. This object adds a low-redshift counterpart to several relatively faint AGN recently uncovered at high redshifts with HST and JWST.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2303.00025/full.md

## References

99 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2303.00025/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2303.00025