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P13 |
February 1998
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To be published in:
Astrophysical Journal Letters
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Image Deconvolution of the Radio Ring PKS 1830-211+
F. Courbin1,2,
C. Lidman3,
B.L. Frye4,
P. Magain1,*,
T.J. Broadhurst4,
M. Pahre5,6,** and
S.G. Djorgovski5.
1 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Avenue de Cointe 5, 4000 Liège, Belgium
2 URA 173 CNRS-DAEC, Observatoire de Paris, F-92195 Meudon Principal cedex, France
3 European Southern Observatory, Casilla 19001, Santiago 19, Chile
4 Astronomy Department, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720
5 Palomar Observatory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
6 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street, Mail Stop 20, Cambridge, MA 02140, USA
* Maître de Recherches FNRS, Belgium
** Hubble Fellow
+ Based on observations obtained at ESO La Silla Observatory, Chile and at the W. M. Keck Observatory, Hawaii, which is operated jointly by the California Institute of Technology and the University of California.
New high quality Keck and ESO images of PKS 1830-211 are presented.
Applying a powerful new deconvolution algorithm to this optical and
infrared data, both images of the flat spectrum core of the radio
source have been identified. An extended source is also detected in
the optical images, consistent with the expected location of the
lensing galaxy. The source counterparts are very red at
I-K ~ 7,
suggesting strong Galactic absorption with additional absorption by
the lensing galaxy at z = 0.885,
and consistent with the detection of high redshift molecules in the lens.
cosmology: observations, gravitational lensing -- quasars: individual:
PKS 1830-211 -- infrared: general -- technique: image processing
methods: data analysis.
A complete HTML version is available on the
"Image
Processing of Gravitational Lenses" Page
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