Disentangling Baryons and Dark Matter in the Spiral Gravitational Lens B1933+503
S. H. Suyu, S. W. Hensel, J. P. McKean, C. D. Fassnacht, T. Treu, A., Halkola, M. Norbury, N. Jackson, P. Schneider, D. Thompson, M. W. Auger, L., V. E. Koopmans, K. Matthews

TL;DR
This study combines lensing and kinematic data to dissect the mass distribution in a spiral galaxy, revealing the shape of its dark matter halo, the disk's contribution to rotation, and implications for stellar initial mass functions.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive mass model of a spiral lens galaxy using new multi-modal observations, constraining the halo shape, dark matter fraction, and stellar mass with high precision.
Findings
The dark matter halo is oblate with flattening a/c=0.33.
Dark matter fraction within 2.2 disk scale lengths is approximately 43%.
The stellar initial mass function favors Chabrier over Salpeter.
Abstract
Measuring the relative mass contributions of luminous and dark matter in spiral galaxies is important for understanding their formation and evolution. The combination of a galaxy rotation curve and strong lensing is a powerful way to break the disk-halo degeneracy that is inherent in each of the methods individually. We present an analysis of the 10-image radio spiral lens B1933+503 at z_l=0.755, incorporating (1) new global VLBI observations, (2) new adaptive-optics assisted K-band imaging, (3) new spectroscopic observations for the lens galaxy rotation curve and the source redshift. We construct a three-dimensionally axisymmetric mass distribution with 3 components: an exponential profile for the disk, a point mass for the bulge, and an NFW profile for the halo. The mass model is simultaneously fitted to the kinematics and the lensing data. The NFW halo needs to be oblate with a…
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