J1721+8842: The first Einstein zig-zag lens
F. Dux, M. Millon, C. Lemon, T. Schmidt, F. Courbin, A. J. Shajib, T., Treu, S. Birrer, K. C. Wong, A. Agnello, A. Andrade, A. A. Galan, J. Hjorth,, E. Paic, S. Schuldt, A. Schweinfurth, D. Sluse, A. Smette, S. H. Suyu

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the first Einstein zig-zag lens, a rare gravitational lensing configuration involving two galaxies creating six images of a background quasar, enabling new cosmological measurements.
Contribution
It presents the first observed Einstein zig-zag lens, demonstrating a complex compound lens system with potential for combined cosmological probes.
Findings
Six images of a quasar formed by two galaxies
Detection of a high-redshift lens galaxy at z=1.885
A multiple-plane lens model accurately reproduces observed images
Abstract
We report the discovery of the first example of an Einstein zig-zag lens, an extremely rare lensing configuration. In this system, J1721+8842, six images of the same background quasar are formed by two intervening galaxies, one at redshift and a second one at . Two out of the six multiple images are deflected in opposite directions as they pass the first lens galaxy on one side, and the second on the other side -- the optical paths forming zig-zags between the two deflectors. In this letter, we demonstrate that J1721+8842, previously thought to be a lensed dual quasar, is in fact a compound lens with the more distant lens galaxy also being distorted as an arc by the foreground galaxy. Evidence supporting this unusual lensing scenario includes: 1- identical light curves in all six lensed quasar images obtained from two years of monitoring at the Nordic Optical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
