We report the discovery of a new gravitational lens candidate Q2138-431AB,
comprising two quasar images at a redshift of 1.641 separated by 4.5 arcsecs.
The spectra of the two images are very similar, and the redshifts agree to
better than 115 km.sec−1. The two images have magnitudes BJ=19.8 and
BJ=21.0, and in spite of a deep search and image subtraction procedure, no
lensing galaxy has been found with R<23.8. Modelling of the system
configuration implies that the mass-to-light ratio of any lensing galaxy is
likely to be around 1000M⊙/L⊙, with an absolute lower limit of
200M⊙/L⊙ for an Einstein-de Sitter universe. We conclude that
the most likely explanation of the observations is gravitational lensing by a
dark galaxy, although it is possible we are seeing a binary quasar.Comment: 17 pages (Latex), 8 postscript figures included, accepted by MNRA