The SDSS J0919 + 2720 strongly lensed
system. Credit: Nature Astronomy (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41550-023-01982-2
A team of researchers from EPFL
have found a way to use the phenomenon of strong gravitational lensing to
determine with precision—about three times more precise than any other
technique—the mass of a galaxy containing a quasar, as well as their evolution
in cosmic time. Knowing the mass of quasar host galaxies provides insight into
the evolution of galaxies in the early universe, for building scenarios of
galaxy formation and black hole development. The results are published in Nature
Astronomy.
"The unprecedented precision
and accuracy achieved with gravitational lensing provide a new avenue for obtaining robust mass
estimates in the distant Universe, where conventional techniques lack precision
and are susceptible to biases," says EPFL astrophysicist Frédéric Courbin,
senior author of the study.
"The masses of host galaxies
have been measured in the past, but thanks to gravitational lensing, this is
the first time that the measurement is so precise in the distant
universe," explains Martin Millon, lead author of the study and currently
at Stanford University on an SNF grant.
Combining gravitational lensing and quasars
A quasar is a luminous manifestation of a supermassive black hole that accretes surrounding matter, sitting at the center of a host galaxy. It is generally difficult to measure how heavy a quasar's host galaxy is because quasars are very distant objects, and also because they are so bright that they overshine anything within their vicinity.
Illustration of quasar lensing. Credit: EPFL /
Austin Peel
Gravitational lensing allows us to
compute the mass of the lensing object. Thanks to Einstein's theory of
gravitation, we know how massive objects in the foreground of the night
sky—the gravitational lens—can bend light coming from background objects. The resulting strange rings
of light are actually distortions of the background object's light by the
gravitational lens.
Courbin was cycling to the Sauverny
Observatory, more than a decade ago, when he realized that he could combine the
two—quasars and gravitational lensing—to measure the mass of a quasar's host
galaxy. For this, he had to find a quasar in a galaxy that also acts as a
gravitational lens.
A handful of gravitational lensing quasars observed so far
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)
database was a great place to search for gravitational lensing quasars
candidates, but to be sure, Courbin had to see the lensing rings. In 2010, he
and colleagues commissioned time on the Hubble Space Telescope to observe four
candidates of which three showed lensing. Of the three, one stood out due to
its characteristic gravitational lensing rings: SDSS J0919+2720.
The HST image of SDSS J0919+2720
seen here shows two bright objects in the foreground that each act as a
gravitational lens, "probably two galaxies in the process of
merging," explains Courbin. The one on the left is a bright quasar, within
a host galaxy too dim to be observed. The bright object on the right is another
galaxy, the main gravitational lens. A faint object on the far left is a
companion galaxy. The characteristic rings are deformed light coming from a
background galaxy.
Computational lens modeling to the rescue
By carefully analyzing the gravitationally lensed rings in SDSS J0919+2720, it is possible to determine the mass of the two bright objects… in principle. Disentangling the masses of the various objects would have been impossible without the recent development of a wavelet-based lens modeling technique by co-author Aymeric Galan, currently at the Technical University of Münich (TUM), also on an SNF grant.
Credit: EPFL / Austin Peel
"One of the biggest challenges
in astrophysics is to understand how a supermassive black hole forms,"
explains Galan. "Knowing its mass, how it compares to its host galaxy and
how it evolves through cosmic times, are what allows us to discard or validate
certain formation theories."
"In the local universe, we
observe that the most massive galaxies also host the most massive black holes
at their center. This could suggest that the growth of galaxies is regulated by
the amount of energy radiated by their central black hole and injected into the
galaxy. However, to test this theory, we still need to study these interactions
not only locally but also in the distant universe," explains Millon.
Gravitational lensing events are
very rare, with one galaxy in a thousand unveiling the phenomenon. Since
quasars are seen in about one every thousand galaxies a quasar acting as a lens
is one in a million. The scientists expect to detect hundreds of these lensing
quasars with the ESA-NASA mission Euclid, to be launched this summer with a
Falcon-9 SpaceX rocket.
by Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Source: Using gravitational lensing to measure mass of a quasar's galaxy with precision (phys.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment