The SWELLS survey. IV. Precision measurements of the stellar and dark matter distributions in a spiral lens galaxy
Matteo Barnab\`e (1), Aaron A. Dutton (2,3,4), Philip J. Marshall (5),, Matthew W. Auger (2,6), Brendon J. Brewer (2), Tommaso Treu (2), Adam S., Bolton (7), David C. Koo (3), L\'eon V. E. Koopmans (8) ((1) KIPAC/SLAC, Stanford, (2) UCSB, (3) UCSC, (4) Victoria, (5) Oxford

TL;DR
This study constructs a detailed mass model of a spiral galaxy using gravitational lensing, gas rotation, and stellar kinematics, providing insights into dark matter distribution and stellar populations.
Contribution
It presents a fully self-consistent, multi-faceted analysis of a spiral galaxy’s mass distribution, combining lensing, kinematics, and stellar modeling with a flexible axisymmetric approach.
Findings
Dark matter fraction within 2.2 disk radii is approximately 28%.
Dark halo is consistent with an uncontracted NFW profile and LCDM predictions.
Stellar mass favors a Chabrier IMF over Salpeter with substantial Bayesian evidence.
Abstract
We construct a fully self-consistent mass model for the lens galaxy J2141 at z=0.14, and use it to improve on previous studies by modelling its gravitational lensing effect, gas rotation curve and stellar kinematics simultaneously. We adopt a very flexible axisymmetric mass model constituted by a generalized NFW dark matter halo and a stellar mass distribution obtained by deprojecting the MGE fit to the high-resolution K'-band LGSAO imaging data of the galaxy, with the (spatially constant) M/L ratio as a free parameter. We model the stellar kinematics by solving the anisotropic Jeans equations. We find that the inner logarithmic slope of the dark halo is weakly constrained (gamma = 0.82^{+0.65}_{-0.54}), and consistent with an unmodified NFW profile. We infer the galaxy to have (i) a dark matter fraction within 2.2 disk radii of 0.28^{+0.15}_{-0.10}, independent of the galaxy stellar…
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