LBQS 1429-008Constellation Virgo Right ascension 14h 32m 29.25s Declination −01° 06′ 16.1″ Redshift 2.08[ 1] Distance 10.5 gly Type QSO Apparent magnitude (V) 17.7 Notable features Triple quasar system LBQS 1429-0053, QSO B1429-0053, SDSS J143229.24-010616.0, VV2006 J143229.2-010617,
FIRST J143229.3-010614, QSO B1429-008A, HB93 1429-008, QSO B1429-0053A, QSO J1432-0106A, QSO B1429-008See also: Quasar , List of quasars
LBQS 1429-008 (QQ 1429−008 , QQ 1432−0106 , QQQ J1432−0106 ) is a distant physical triple quasar located 10.5 billion light years away from Earth in the constellation of Virgo .[ 2] It was discovered in 1989 by Paul Hewett and his colleagues from the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge in England .[ 3]
Originally a binary pair instead of a gravitational lensed quasar,[ 4] a third quasar component was found in LBQS 1429-008 during an observation by a team of researchers from Keck Observatory who used a 10-meter telescope .[ 5] This makes them the first physical triple quasar discovered.[ 6] [ 7] The system has an estimated separation of 30-50 kiloparsecs .[ 7]
References
^ Simbad
^ information@eso.org. "Triple quasar QQQ 1429-008" . www.eso.org . Retrieved 2024-05-16 .
^ information@eso.org. "It Is No Mirage! - Large Telescopes Team Up to Help Astronomers Discover a Trio of Quasars" . www.eso.org . Retrieved 2024-09-12 .
^ Faure, C.; Alloin, D.; Gras, S.; Courbin, F.; Kneib, J.-P.; Hudelot, P. (2003-07-01). "LBQS 1429-0053: A binary quasar rather than a lensed quasar" . Astronomy & Astrophysics . 405 (2): 415– 424. doi :10.1051/0004-6361:20030614 . ISSN 0004-6361 .
^ "A genuine "triple star" quasar" . www.astroarts.co.jp . Retrieved 2024-09-12 .
^ Sky & Telescope The First Triple Quasar January 10, 2007
^ a b Djorgovski, S. G.; Courbin, F.; Meylan, G.; Sluse, D.; Thompson, D.; Mahabal, A.; Glikman, E. (2007-06-01). "Discovery of a Probable Physical Triple Quasar" . The Astrophysical Journal . 662 : L1 – L5 . doi :10.1086/519162 . ISSN 0004-637X .