_version_ 1866915799582638080
author Allingham, Joseph F. V.
Zitrin, Adi
Kokorev, Vasily
Yanagisawa, Hiroto
Diego, Jose M.
Furtak, Lukas J.
Asada, Yoshihisa
Coe, Dan
Coulter, David A.
Fujimoto, Seiji
Larison, Conor
Oguri, Masamune
Pierel, Justin D. R.
Sun, Fengwu
Bradac, Marusa
Dayal, Pratika
Lopes, Paulo A. A.
Meena, Ashish K.
Pascale, Massimo
Akins, Hollis B.
Bauer, Franz E.
Bradley, Larry D.
Brammer, Gabriel
Chisholm, John
Desprez, Guillaume
Fei, Qinyue
Ferguson, Henry C.
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Frye, Brenda
Golubchik, Miriam
Inayoshi, Kohei
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lucas, Ray A.
Magdis, Georgios E.
Martis, Nicholas S.
Pan, Richard
Richard, Johan
Ricotti, Massimo
Rihtarsic, Gregor
Robbins, Luke
Sheu, William
Welch, Brian
Willott, Chris
Windhorst, Rogier A.
author_facet Allingham, Joseph F. V.
Zitrin, Adi
Kokorev, Vasily
Yanagisawa, Hiroto
Diego, Jose M.
Furtak, Lukas J.
Asada, Yoshihisa
Coe, Dan
Coulter, David A.
Fujimoto, Seiji
Larison, Conor
Oguri, Masamune
Pierel, Justin D. R.
Sun, Fengwu
Bradac, Marusa
Dayal, Pratika
Lopes, Paulo A. A.
Meena, Ashish K.
Pascale, Massimo
Akins, Hollis B.
Bauer, Franz E.
Bradley, Larry D.
Brammer, Gabriel
Chisholm, John
Desprez, Guillaume
Fei, Qinyue
Ferguson, Henry C.
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Frye, Brenda
Golubchik, Miriam
Inayoshi, Kohei
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lucas, Ray A.
Magdis, Georgios E.
Martis, Nicholas S.
Pan, Richard
Richard, Johan
Ricotti, Massimo
Rihtarsic, Gregor
Robbins, Luke
Sheu, William
Welch, Brian
Willott, Chris
Windhorst, Rogier A.
contents We present a parametric strong-lensing model for the galaxy cluster MACS J1931.8-2635 ($z_l = 0.35$), accompanying the detection of the spectroscopically confirmed SN Eos at $z = 5.13$ (Coulter et al. 2026). We identify 10 new multiple-image systems in recent VENUS JWST/NIRCam imaging, so that the model is constrained with a total of 19 robust multiple-image systems -- nine of which also have a spectroscopic redshift. For the point-like source corresponding to SN Eos, our model predicts a total of five images, with the observed radial image pair having a similar magnification of $μ\simeq 25 - 30$ and a small time delay of $< 5$ days, in agreement with their simultaneous observation. According to the model, the other three predicted images arrived earlier, with time delays of $3.7 \pm 0.7$, $3.5 \pm 0.7$ and $54.0 \pm 10.8$ years prior to the two observed images, and with magnifications of $12.9 \pm 2.6$, $13.0 \pm 2.9$ and $2.2 \pm 0.4$, respectively. The absence of detections at the predicted positions, where the host galaxy's images are also visible, confirms the transient nature of the source. SN Eos and its host galaxy are studied in separate articles, and we here focus on the lens model. The final model reaches a very good $r.m.s.$ distance between model and observations of $0.44''$. We present the lens-modeling results, including newly identified systems such as a triply imaged, grand-design spiral galaxy candidate at $z \simeq 3.65_{-0.09}^{+0.04}$, and briefly discuss the potential of using high-redshift lensed SNe for cosmography.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_14074
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle VENUS: Strong-lensing model of MACS J1931.8-2635 -- revealing the farthest multiply imaged supernova
Allingham, Joseph F. V.
Zitrin, Adi
Kokorev, Vasily
Yanagisawa, Hiroto
Diego, Jose M.
Furtak, Lukas J.
Asada, Yoshihisa
Coe, Dan
Coulter, David A.
Fujimoto, Seiji
Larison, Conor
Oguri, Masamune
Pierel, Justin D. R.
Sun, Fengwu
Bradac, Marusa
Dayal, Pratika
Lopes, Paulo A. A.
Meena, Ashish K.
Pascale, Massimo
Akins, Hollis B.
Bauer, Franz E.
Bradley, Larry D.
Brammer, Gabriel
Chisholm, John
Desprez, Guillaume
Fei, Qinyue
Ferguson, Henry C.
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Frye, Brenda
Golubchik, Miriam
Inayoshi, Kohei
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lucas, Ray A.
Magdis, Georgios E.
Martis, Nicholas S.
Pan, Richard
Richard, Johan
Ricotti, Massimo
Rihtarsic, Gregor
Robbins, Luke
Sheu, William
Welch, Brian
Willott, Chris
Windhorst, Rogier A.
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Astrophysics of Galaxies
We present a parametric strong-lensing model for the galaxy cluster MACS J1931.8-2635 ($z_l = 0.35$), accompanying the detection of the spectroscopically confirmed SN Eos at $z = 5.13$ (Coulter et al. 2026). We identify 10 new multiple-image systems in recent VENUS JWST/NIRCam imaging, so that the model is constrained with a total of 19 robust multiple-image systems -- nine of which also have a spectroscopic redshift. For the point-like source corresponding to SN Eos, our model predicts a total of five images, with the observed radial image pair having a similar magnification of $μ\simeq 25 - 30$ and a small time delay of $< 5$ days, in agreement with their simultaneous observation. According to the model, the other three predicted images arrived earlier, with time delays of $3.7 \pm 0.7$, $3.5 \pm 0.7$ and $54.0 \pm 10.8$ years prior to the two observed images, and with magnifications of $12.9 \pm 2.6$, $13.0 \pm 2.9$ and $2.2 \pm 0.4$, respectively. The absence of detections at the predicted positions, where the host galaxy's images are also visible, confirms the transient nature of the source. SN Eos and its host galaxy are studied in separate articles, and we here focus on the lens model. The final model reaches a very good $r.m.s.$ distance between model and observations of $0.44''$. We present the lens-modeling results, including newly identified systems such as a triply imaged, grand-design spiral galaxy candidate at $z \simeq 3.65_{-0.09}^{+0.04}$, and briefly discuss the potential of using high-redshift lensed SNe for cosmography.
title VENUS: Strong-lensing model of MACS J1931.8-2635 -- revealing the farthest multiply imaged supernova
topic Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.14074