The faintest radio source yet: EVLA observations of the gravitational lens SDSS J1004+4112

May, 2011
9 pages
Published in:
  • Astrophys.J.Lett. 739 (2011) L28
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Abstract: (arXiv)
We present new radio observations of the large-separation gravitationally-lensed quasar SDSS J1004+4112, taken in a total of 6 hours of observations with the Extended Very Large Array (EVLA). The maps reach a thermal noise level of approximately 7microJy. We detect four of the five lensed images at the 30-65microJy level, representing a source of intrinsic flux density, after allowing for lensing magnification, of about 2microJy, intrinsically probably the faintest radio source yet detected. This reinforces the utility of gravitational lensing in potentially allowing us to study nanoJy-level sources before the advent of the SKA. In an optical observation taken three months after the radio observation, image C is the brightest image, whereas the radio map shows flux density ratios consistent with previous optical observations. Future observations separated by a time delay will give the intrinsic flux ratios of the images in this source.
Note:
  • 9 pages, 2 figures. Revised version to correct an error in the flux scale (was too low by a factor of 1.85) caused by a problem in the processing of calibration tables in the first version