Cosmological parameters from strong gravitational lensing and stellar dynamics in elliptical galaxies
C. Grillo, M. Lombardi, and G. Bertin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method combining strong gravitational lensing and stellar dynamics in elliptical galaxies to estimate cosmological parameters, demonstrating its feasibility with current data and potential for future surveys.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel approach to measure cosmological parameters using combined lensing and stellar dynamics data, validated through simulations and current observations.
Findings
Current data sets are consistent with the standard dark-energy density parameter.
Simulations show the method can constrain cosmological parameters with realistic uncertainties.
Future large samples will significantly improve the precision of cosmological measurements.
Abstract
We show how the combination of observations related to strong gravitational lensing and stellar dynamics in ellipticals offers a new way to measure the cosmological matter and dark-energy density parameters. A gravitational lensing estimate of the mass enclosed inside the Einstein circle can be obtained by measuring the Einstein angle, once the critical density of the system is known. A model-dependent dynamical estimate of this mass can also be obtained by measuring the central velocity dispersion of the stellar component. By assuming the well-tested homologous 1/r^{2} profile for the total density distribution in the lens elliptical galaxies, these two mass measurements can be properly compared. Thus, a relation between the Einstein angle and the central stellar velocity dispersion is derived, and the cosmological matter and the dark-energy density parameters can be estimated from…
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