Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

NICMOS and VLA Observations of the Gravitationally Lensed Ultraluminous BAL Quasar APM 08279+5255: Detection of a Third Image

FREE

Rodrigo A. Ibata1, Geraint F. Lewis2,6, Michael J. Irwin3, Joseph Lehár4 and Edward J. Totten5

Show affiliations


We present a suite of observations of the recently identified ultraluminous BAL quasar APM 08279+5255, taken both in the infrared with the NICMOS high-resolution camera on board the Hubble Space Telescope and at 3.5 cm with the Very Large Array. With an inferred luminosity of ~5 × 1015 Lodot, APM 08279+5255 is apparently the most luminous system known. Extant ground-based images show that APM 08279+5255 is not pointlike, but is instead separated into two components, indicative of gravitational lensing. The much higher resolution images presented here also reveal two point sources, A and B, of almost equal brightness (fB/fA = 0.782 ± 0.010), separated by 0farcs378 ± 0farcs001, as well as a third, previously unknown, fainter image, C, seen between the brighter images. While the nature of C is not fully determined, several lines of evidence point to it being a third gravitationally lensed image of the quasar, rather than being the lensing galaxy. Simple models that recover the relative image configuration and brightnesses are presented. While proving to be substantially amplified, APM 08279+5255 possesses an intrinsic bolometric luminosity of ~1014 → 1015 Lodot and remains amongst the most luminous objects known.


Keywords

gravitational lensing; quasars: individual (APM 08279+5255)


Dates

Issue 5 (1999 November)

Received 1999 July 12, accepted for publication 1999 July 29



View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.