A New Window of Exploration in the Mass Spectrum: Strong Lensing by Galaxy Groups in the SL2S
M. Limousin, R. Cabanac, R. Gavazzi, J.-P. Kneib, V. Motta, J., Richard, K. Thanjavur, G. Foex, R. Pello, D. Crampton, C. Faure, B. Fort, E., Jullo, P. Marshall, Y. Mellier, A. More, G. Soucail, S. Suyu, M. Swinbank,, J.-F. Sygnet, H. Tu, D. Valls-Gabaud, T. Verdugo, J. Willis

TL;DR
This paper presents a new sample of 13 strong lensing systems caused by galaxy groups, filling a gap in the mass spectrum and providing insights into the transition between galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Contribution
The study introduces a new sample of intermediate-scale strong lensing systems, expanding the exploration of mass spectrum between galaxy and cluster scales.
Findings
Lenses have Einstein radii between 3" and 8".
Mass to light ratio is approximately 250 solar units.
Structures are dynamically young with complex shapes.
Abstract
The existence of strong lensing systems with Einstein radii (Re) covering the full mass spectrum, from ~1-2" (produced by galaxy scale dark matter haloes) to >10" (produced by galaxy cluster scale haloes) have long been predicted. Many lenses with Re around 1-2" and above 10" have been reported but very few in between. In this article, we present a sample of 13 strong lensing systems with Re in the range 3"- 8", i.e. systems produced by galaxy group scale dark matter haloes, spanning a redshift range from 0.3 to 0.8. This opens a new window of exploration in the mass spectrum, around 10^{13}- 10^{14} M_{sun}, which is a crucial range for understanding the transition between galaxies and galaxy clusters. Our analysis is based on multi-colour CFHTLS images complemented with HST imaging and ground based spectroscopy. Large scale properties are derived from both the light distribution of…
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