Machine-learning helps discover rare ‘quadruply imaged quasars’

This diagram illustrates how quadruply imaged quasars, or quads for short, are produced on the sky. (R. Hurt, IPAC/Caltech/The GraL Collaboration)

Four of the newfound quadruply imaged quasars are shown. The central object in the images is the lensing galaxy, the gravity of which is splitting the light from the quasar behind it in such a way to produce four quasar images. By modeling these systems and monitoring how the different images vary in brightness over time, astronomers can determine the expansion rate of the universe and help solve cosmological problems. The GraL Collaboration/Special to West Hawaii Today

Four of the newfound quadruply imaged quasars are shown. (The GraL Collaboration/Special to West Hawaii Today)

With the help of machine-learning techniques, a team of astronomers has discovered a dozen quasars that have been warped by a naturally occurring cosmic “lens” and split into four similar images. Quasars are extremely luminous cores of distant galaxies that are powered by supermassive black holes.