COSMOGRAIL: the COSmological MOnitoring of GRAvItational Lenses II. SDSS J0924+0219: the redshift of the lensing galaxy, the quasar spectral variability and the Einstein rings
A. Eigenbrod (1), F. Courbin (1), S. Dye (2), G. Meylan (1), D. Sluse, (1), P. Saha (3), C. Vuissoz (1), P. Magain (4). (1- EPFL Switzerland, 2-, Cardiff Univ. UK, 3- Univ. Zurich Switzerland, 4- Univ. Liege Belgium)

TL;DR
This study presents spectroscopic and imaging analysis of the gravitational lens SDSS J0924+0219, determining the lens galaxy's redshift, observing quasar spectral variability, and revealing complex lens structures including Einstein rings, with implications for lens modeling and substructure effects.
Contribution
We provide the redshift of the lensing galaxy, analyze spectral variability, and uncover complex Einstein ring structures, highlighting the importance of substructures in lens modeling.
Findings
Lens galaxy redshift z=0.394 ± 0.001.
Observed spectral variability in broad emission lines.
Detected double Einstein rings indicating complex lens structure.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present our VLT/FORS1 deep spectroscopic observations of the gravitationally lensed quasar SDSS J0924+0219, as well as archival HST/NICMOS and ACS images of the same object. The two-epoch spectra, obtained in the Multi Object Spectroscopy (MOS) mode, allow for very accurate flux calibration, spatial deconvolution of the data, and provide the redshift of the lensing galaxy z=0.394 +/- 0.001. These spectra, taken 15 days apart, show only slight continuum variations, while the broad emission lines display obvious changes in the red wing of the Mg II line, in the Fe II bands, and in the central part of the C III] line. Even though variations in the line profiles are present, we do not see any significant differences between the continuum and emission line flux ratios of images A and B of the quasar. Spatial deconvolution of the HST images reveals a double Einstein ring. One…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
