Astronomy:Cosmic Horseshoe

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Short description: Galaxy


SDSS J114833.14+193003.2
A Horseshoe Einstein Ring from Hubble.JPG
The Cosmic Horseshoe taken using the Wide Field Camera 3 of the Hubble Space Telescope.
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
ConstellationLeo
Right ascension 11h 48m 33.1s[1]
Declination19° 30′ 03″[1]
Redshift0.4457 (foreground galaxy)
2.379 (lensed galaxy)[1]
Distance5.2 Gly (1.6 Gpc) (foreground galaxy)
10.3 Gly (3.2 Gpc) (lensed galaxy)h−10.678[1]
Apparent magnitude (B)20.3[1]
Characteristics
TypeE (Luminous red galaxy) (foreground galaxy)
Mass5.2 × 1012 M
Notable featuresGravitationally lensed system
Other designations
SDSS J114833.14+193003.2
The Cosmic Horseshoe

The Cosmic Horseshoe is the nickname given to a gravitationally lensed system of two galaxies in the constellation Leo.

The foreground galaxy lies directly in front in the line of sight to a more distant galaxy. Due to the passage of the light from the background galaxy through the gravity field of the foreground galaxy, the background galaxy's light is lensed by the warped spacetime environment of the foreground galaxy, thus giving the background galaxy a warped appearance. Unlike most lensed galaxies, the shape of the lensed light of this background galaxy appears shaped like a horseshoe.

The foreground galaxy, LRG 3-757, is found to be extremely massive, with a mass a hundred times that of this galaxy. It is notable because it belongs to a rare class of galaxies called luminous red galaxies, which has an extremely luminous infrared emission.

The system was discovered in 2007 by an international team of scientists[2] using the comprehensive Sloan Digital Sky Survey and is greatly studied by the Hubble Space Telescope.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "CSWA 1". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=CSWA+1. 
  2. Belokurov, V. (December 2007). "The Cosmic Horseshoe: Discovery of an Einstein Ring around a Giant Luminous Red Galaxy". The Astrophysical Journal 671 (1): L9–L12. doi:10.1086/524948. Bibcode2007ApJ...671L...9B.