Two accurate time-delay distances from strong lensing: Implications for cosmology
S. H. Suyu, M. W. Auger, S. Hilbert, P. J. Marshall, M. Tewes, T., Treu, C. D. Fassnacht, L. V. E. Koopmans, D. Sluse, R. D. Blandford, F., Courbin, G. Meylan

TL;DR
This paper presents a precise, blind analysis of strong gravitational lens RXJ1131-1231 to measure the time-delay distance, providing independent constraints on cosmological parameters and the Hubble constant.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive, bias-free methodology combining multiple data sources to accurately determine the time-delay distance and cosmological parameters from strong lensing.
Findings
Time-delay distance measured to 6% precision
Hubble constant estimated as approximately 80 km/s/Mpc
Results consistent with other lensing analyses and cosmological probes
Abstract
Strong gravitational lenses with measured time delays between the multiple images and models of the lens mass distribution allow a one-step determination of the time-delay distance, and thus a measure of cosmological parameters. We present a blind analysis of the gravitational lens RXJ1131-1231 incorporating (1) the newly measured time delays from COSMOGRAIL, (2) archival HST imaging of the lens system, (3) a new velocity-dispersion measurement of the lens galaxy of 323+/-20km/s based on Keck spectroscopy, and (4) a characterization of the line-of-sight structures via observations of the lens' environment and ray tracing through the Millennium Simulation. Our blind analysis is designed to prevent experimenter bias. The joint analysis of the data sets allows a time-delay distance measurement to 6% precision that takes into account all known systematic uncertainties. In combination with…
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