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P54 |
June 2000
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To be published in:
Astronomy & Astrophysics
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Near-IR Spectroscopy of the lens and source in the double
quasar HE 1104-1805+
F. Courbin1,
C. Lidman2,
G. Meylan3,
J.-P. Kneib4 and
P. Magain5
1 Universidad Católica de Chile, Departamento de Astronomia y Astrofisica, Casilla 306, Santiago 22, Chile
2 European Southern Observatory, Casilla 19, Santiago, Chile
3 European Sourthern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild Strasse 2, D-85748 Garching bei München, Germany
4 Laboratoire d'Astrophysique, Observatoire Midi-Pyrénée, UMR5572, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, F-31000, Toulouse, France
5 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Avenue de Cointe 5, 4000 Liège, Belgium
+ Based on observations collected with the ESO New Technology Telescope (program 61.B-0413)
A new technique for the spatial deconvolution of spectra is applied to
near-IR (0.95 - 2.50µ) NTT/SOFI spectra of the lensed,
radio-quiet quasar HE 1104-1805. The red continuum spectrum of the
lensing galaxy is revealed between 1.5µ and 2.5µ. Although
the spectrum does not show strong emission features, it is used in
combination with previous optical and IR photometry, to infer a
plausible redshift estimate in the range 0.8<z<1.2. Modeling of the
system shows that the lens is complex, probably composed of the red
galaxy seen between the QSO images and of a more extended component
associated with a "dark" galaxy cluster with fairly low velocity
dispersion (~ 575 km.s-1). Unless more
constrains can be put on the mass distribution of the cluster (if
detected at all), e.g., from deep X-ray observations, HE 1104-1805
will not be a good system to determine H0 based on its
time delay measurement. The spectra of the two lensed images of the source
remain of great interest. They show no trace of reddening at the redshift
of the lens nor at the redshift of the source. This supports the
hypothesis of an elliptical lens. Additionally, the difference
between the spectrum of the brightest component and that of a scaled
version of the faintest component is a featureless continuum. Broad
and narrow emission lines, including the FeII features, are perfectly
subtracted. The very good quality of our spectrum makes it possible
to fit precisely the optical FeII feature, taking into account the
underlying continuum over a wide wavelength range. HE 1104-1805 can
be classified as a weak FeII emitter. Finally, the slope of the
continuum in the brightest image is steeper than the continuum in the
faintest image and supports the finding by Wisotzki et al. (1993)
that the brightest image is microlensed. This is particularly
interesting in view of the new methods developed for source
reconstruction from multiwavelengths photometric monitorings. While
HE 1104-1805 does not seem the best target for determining
cosmological parameters, it is probably the second most interesting
object after Q 2237+0305 (the Einstein cross), in terms of
microlensing. We also stress that multiply imaged QSOs with
known time delays might prove more useful as tools for detecting dark
mass in distant lenses than for determining cosmological parameters.
gravitational lensing - cosmology - microlensing -
infrared - quasars; individual: HE 1104-1805 - data processing
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