Reports results from two searches for new radio lenses in existing surveys and discusses the completeness of the population usable for constraining dark matter properties via astrometric perturbations.
A nearly symmetric double-image gravitational lens
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abstract
We report the discovery of a new double-image gravitational lens resulting from our search for lenses in the southern sky. Radio source PMN J2004-1349 is composed of two compact components separated by 1.13 arcseconds in VLA, MERLIN and VLBA images. The components have a flux ratio of 1:1 at radio frequencies ranging from 5 GHz to 22 GHz. The I-band optical counterpart is also an equal double, with roughly the same separation and position angle as the radio double. Upon subtraction of the components from the I-band image, we identify a dim pattern of residuals as the lens galaxy. While the present observations are sufficient to establish that J2004-1349 is a gravitational lens, additional information will be necessary (such as the redshifts of the galaxy and quasar, and precise astrometry and photometry of the lens galaxy) before constructing detailed mass models.
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astro-ph.CO 1years
2026 1verdicts
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Taking Inventory of the Most Promising Lensed Radio Sources for Constraining Fundamental Properties of Dark Matter
Reports results from two searches for new radio lenses in existing surveys and discusses the completeness of the population usable for constraining dark matter properties via astrometric perturbations.