The Sloan Lens ACS Survey. VIII. The relation between environment and internal structure of early-type galaxies
T. Treu (1), R. Gavazzi (1), A. Gorecki (1), P.J. Marshall (1), L.V.E., Koopmans (2), A.S. Bolton (3), L.A. Moustakas (4), S.Burles (5) (UCSB (1),, Kapteyn (2), IfA (3), JPL (4), MIT (5))

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences the internal structure of early-type galaxies using gravitational lensing data, finding minimal external effects and no strong correlation between environment and mass profile slope.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis linking environment measures to galaxy internal structure using a large lens sample, showing that environment has limited impact on mass profiles.
Findings
Overdensity around lens galaxies is slightly above average.
Lens galaxies are representative of the general early-type population.
External mass contributes minimally to lensing signals.
Abstract
We study the relation between the internal structure of early-type galaxies and their environment using 70 strong gravitational lenses from the Sloan ACS Lens Survey. The Sloan database is used to determine two measures of overdensity of galaxies around each lens: the projected number density of galaxies inside the tenth nearest neighbor (\Sigma_{10}) and within a cone of radius one h^{-1} Mpc (D_1). Our main results are: 1) The average overdensity is somewhat larger than unity, consistent with lenses preferring overdense environments as expected for massive early-type galaxies (12/70 lenses are in known groups/clusters). 2) The distribution of overdensities is indistinguishable from that of "twin" non-lens galaxies selected from SDSS to have the same redshift and stellar velocity dispersion \sigma_*. Thus, within our errors, lens galaxies are an unbiased population, and the SLACS…
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