The SWELLS Survey. I. A large spectroscopically selected sample of edge-on late-type lens galaxies
T.Treu (1), A.A.Dutton (2,3), M.W.Auger (1), P.J.Marshall (1,4,5),, A.S.Bolton (6), B.J.Brewer (1), D.Koo (3), L.V.E.Koopmans (7) ((1) UCSB, (2), Victoria, (3) UCSC, (4) Stanford, (5) Oxford, (6) Utah, (7) Kapteyn)

TL;DR
This paper introduces the SWELLS survey, presenting a sample of edge-on late-type lens galaxies with detailed imaging and kinematic data, aimed at understanding dark matter and baryonic contributions in spiral galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive sample of spectroscopically selected edge-on spiral galaxy lenses with multi-band imaging and rotation curves, enabling studies of dark matter and baryonic matter interplay.
Findings
Sample includes 16 secure, 1 probable, and 6 possible lenses.
Lenses span a broad range of morphologies and stellar mass ratios.
Sample is representative of high-mass, high-inclination disky galaxies.
Abstract
The relative contribution of baryons and dark matter to the inner regions of spiral galaxies provides critical clues to their formation and evolution, but it is generally difficult to determine. For spiral galaxies that are strong gravitational lenses, however, the combination of lensing and kinematic observations can be used to break the disk-halo degeneracy. In turn, such data constrain fundamental parameters such as i) the mass density profile slope and axis ratio of the dark matter halo, and by comparison with dark matter-only numerical simulations the modifications imposed by baryons; ii) the mass in stars and therefore the overall star formation efficiency, and the amount of feedback; iii) by comparison with stellar population synthesis models, the normalization of the stellar initial mass function. In this first paper of a series, we present a sample of 16 secure, 1 probable, and…
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