The COSMOS-Web ring: in-depth characterization of an Einstein ring lensing system at z~2
W. Mercier, M. Shuntov, R. Gavazzi, J. W. Nightingale, R. Arango, O., Ilbert, A. Amvrosiadis, L. Ciesla, C. Casey, S. Jin, A. L. Faisst, I. T., Andika, N. E. Drakos, A. Enia, M. Franco, S. Gillman, G. Gozaliasl, C. C., Hayward, M. Huertas-Company, J. S. Kartaltepe

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed analysis of the COSMOS-Web ring, an Einstein ring at z=2, revealing the properties of a massive lens galaxy and a high-redshift star-forming source, using multi-band photometry and lens modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first in-depth characterization of the most distant Einstein ring lens at z=2, combining photometry and lens modeling to determine galaxy masses and source morphology.
Findings
Lens galaxy is a massive, quiescent elliptical at z=2.02.
Source galaxy is star-forming at z=5.48 with complex morphology.
Mass measurements are consistent with standard dark matter halo models.
Abstract
Aims. We provide an in-depth analysis of the COSMOS-Web ring, an Einstein ring at z=2 that we serendipitously discovered in the COSMOS-Web survey and possibly the most distant lens discovered to date. Methods. We extract the visible and NIR photometry from more than 25 bands and we derive the photometric redshifts and physical properties of both the lens and the source with three different SED fitting codes. Using JWST/NIRCam images, we also produce two lens models to (i) recover the total mass of the lens, (ii) derive the magnification of the system, (iii) reconstruct the morphology of the lensed source, and (iv) measure the slope of the total mass density profile of the lens. Results. The lens is a very massive and quiescent (sSFR < 10^(-13) yr-1) elliptical galaxy at z = 2.02 \pm 0.02 with a total mass Mtot(<thetaE) = (3.66 \pm 0.36) x 10^11 Msun and a stellar mass M* = (1.37 \pm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
