Stellar mass estimates in early-type galaxies from lensing+dynamical and photometric measurements
C. Grillo, R. Gobat, P. Rosati, and M. Lombardi

TL;DR
This study compares lensing+dynamics and photometric methods for estimating stellar masses in early-type galaxies, finding high correlation and agreement, thus validating the reliability of photometric mass estimates.
Contribution
It demonstrates that photometric and lensing+dynamics methods produce consistent stellar mass estimates for early-type galaxies, confirming the reliability of photometric techniques.
Findings
High correlation coefficient of 0.94 between methods
Median mass ratio close to 1.1, indicating agreement
Photometric estimates are reliable with optical/near-IR data
Abstract
In this paper we compare two different diagnostics for estimating stellar masses in early-type galaxies and we establish their level of reliability. In particular, we consider the well-studied sample of 15 field elliptical galaxies selected from the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) Survey (z = 0.06-0.33). We examine here the correlation between the stellar mass values, enclosed inside the Einstein radius of each lens, based on analyses of lensing and stellar dynamics combined and based on multiwavelength photometry spectral template fitting. The lensing+dynamics stellar mass is obtained from the published SLACS Survey results, assuming a two-component density distribution model and a prior from the fundamental plane on the mass-to-light ratio for the lens galaxies. The photometric stellar mass is measured by fitting the observed spectral energy distribution of the galaxies (from the SDSS…
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