CTQ 839: Candidate for the smallest projected separation binary quasar
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2000-03Metadata
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Morgan, Nicholas D.
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CTQ 839: Candidate for the smallest projected separation binary quasar
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Abstract
We report the discovery of the new double quasar CTQ 839. This B\18.3, radio-quiet quasar pair is
separated by 2A.1 in BRI and H Ðlters, with magnitude di erences of *mB\2.5, *mR\*mI\1.9, and
*mH\2.3. Spectral observations reveal both components to be z\2.24 quasars, with relative redshifts
that agree at the 100 km s~1 level but exhibit pronounced di erences in the equivalent widths of related
emission features, as well as an enhancement of blue continuum Ñux in the brighter component as compared
with the fainter component longward of the Lya emission feature. In general, similar redshift
double quasars can be the result of a physical binary pair or of a single quasar multiply imaged by
gravitational lensing. Empirical point-spread function subtraction of R and H band images of CTQ 839
reveal no indication of a lensing galaxy and place a detection limit of R\22.5 and H\17.4 for a third
component in the system. For an Einstein-de Sitter cosmology and singular isothermal sphere model, the
R band detection limit constrains the characteristics of any lensing galaxy to zlZ1 with a corresponding
luminosity of L Z5 L while an analysis based on the redshift probability distribution for the lensing *
,
galaxy argues against the existence of a zlZ1 lens at the 2 p level. A similar analysis for a "-dominated
cosmology, however, does not signiÐcantly constrain the existence of any lensing galaxy. The broadband
Ñux di erences, spectral dissimilarities, and failure to detect a lensing galaxy make the lensing hypothesis
for CTQ 839 unlikely. The similar redshifts of the two components would then argue for a physical
quasar binary. At a projected separation of 8.3 h~1 kpc ()m\1), CTQ 839 would be the smallest projected
separation binary quasar currently known.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126023
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THE ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 119:1083È1089, 2000 March
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