The Magnificent Five Images of Supernova Refsdal: Time Delay and Magnification Measurements

Kelly, Patrick L.; Rodney, Steven; Treu, Tommaso; Birrer, Simon; Bonvin, Vivien; Dessart, Luc; Foley, Ryan J.; Filippenko, Alexei V.; Gilman, Daniel; Jha, Saurabh; Hjorth, Jens; Mandel, Kaisey; Millon, Martin; Pierel, Justin; Thorp, Stephen; Zitrin, Adi; Broadhurst, Tom; Chen, Wenlei; Diego, Jose M.; Dressler, Alan; Graur, Or; Jauzac, Mathilde; Malkan, Matthew A.; McCully, Curtis; Oguri, Masamune; Postman, Marc; Schmidt, Kasper Borello; Sharon, Keren; Tucker, Brad E.; von der Linden, Anja; Wambsganss, Joachim
2023
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/ac4ccb
In late 2014, four images of Supernova (SN) "Refsdal," the first known example of a strongly lensed SN with multiple resolved images, were detected in the MACS J1149 galaxy-cluster field. Following the images' discovery, the SN was predicted to reappear within hundreds of days at a new position similar to 8 arcseconds away in the field. The observed reappearance in late 2015 makes it possible to carry out Refsdal's (1964) original proposal to use a multiply imaged SN to measure the Hubble constant H-0, since the time delay between appearances should vary inversely with H-0. Moreover, the position, brightness, and timing of the reappearance enable a novel test of the blind predictions of galaxy-cluster models, which are typically constrained only by the positions of multiply imaged galaxies. We have developed a new photometry pipeline that uses DOLPHOT to measure the fluxes of the five images of SN Refsdal from difference images. We apply four separate techniques to perform a blind measurement of the relative time delays and magnification ratios (mu_i/mu_1) between the last image SX and the earlier images S1-S4. We measure the relative time delay of SX-S1 to be 376.0(-5.5)(+5.6) days and the relative magnification to be 0.30(-0.03)(+0.05). This corresponds to a 1.5% precision on the time delay and 17% precision for the magnification ratios, and includes uncertainties due to millilensing and microlensing. In an accompanying paper, we place initial and blind constraints on the value of the Hubble constant.