Finding a needle in a cosmic haystack

Astronomers Dominic Walton (left) and Daniel Stern (right) collaborated remotely via Zoom to conduct their study of the lensed, obscured quasar MG 1131+0456 and determine its distance. (D. Stern, NASA JPL/D. Walton, University of Cambridge IoA/Special to West Hawaii Today)

A radio image of MG 1131+0456, the first known Einstein ring observed in 1987 using the very large array. (VLA/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Examples of Einstein ring gravitational lenses taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. (NASA/ESA/SLACS Survey team: A. Bolton (Harvard/Smithsonian), S. Burles (MIT), L. Koopmans (Kapteyn), T. Treu (UCSB), L. Moustakas (JPL/Caltech)/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Determined to find a needle in a cosmic haystack, a pair of astronomers time traveled through archives of old data from W. M. Keck Observatory on Mauankea and old X-ray data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory to unlock a mystery surrounding a bright, lensed, heavily obscured quasar.