A Very Bright, Highly Magnified Lyman Break Galaxy at z = 3.07

  • Smail I
  • Swinbank A
  • Richard J
  • et al.
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Abstract

Using Hubble Space Telescope imaging and Keck spectroscopy, we report the discovery of a very bright, highly magnified (~30 times) Lyman break galaxy (LBG) at z=3.07 in the field of the massive z=0.33 cluster MACS J2135.2-0102. The system comprises two high surface brightness arcs with a maximum extent of 3", bracketing a central object that we identify as a massive early-type galaxy at z=0.73. We construct a lens model that reproduces the main features of the system using a combination of a galaxy-scale lens and the foreground cluster. We show that the morphological, spectral, and photometric properties of the arcs are consistent with them arising from the lensing of a single ~L*V LBG. The most important feature of this system is that the lensing magnification results in an apparent magnitude of r=20.3, making this one of the brightest LBGs known. Such a high magnification provides the opportunity of obtaining very high signal-to-noise ratio (and potentially spatially resolved) spectroscopy of a high-redshift galaxy to study its physical properties. We present initial imaging and spectroscopy demonstrating the basic properties of the system and discuss the opportunities for future observations.

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APA

Smail, I., Swinbank, A. M., Richard, J., Ebeling, H., Kneib, J.-P., Edge, A. C., … Mullis, C. (2007). A Very Bright, Highly Magnified Lyman Break Galaxy at z = 3.07. The Astrophysical Journal, 654(1), L33–L36. https://doi.org/10.1086/510902

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