Ambiguities in gravitational lens models: the density field from the source position transformation
Sandra Unruh, Peter Schneider, Dominique Sluse

TL;DR
This paper investigates the source position transformation (SPT) in gravitational lensing, revealing its effects on mass profiles and ellipticity, and demonstrating that SPTs can significantly alter lens models while preserving mass within the Einstein radius.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of SPTs excluding the mass-sheet transformation, showing how they modify density profiles and induce ellipticity in lens models.
Findings
SPTs can significantly alter the radial mass profiles.
Original axisymmetric distributions can become elliptical.
Mass within the Einstein radius remains conserved.
Abstract
Strong gravitational lensing is regarded as the most precise technique to measure the mass in the inner region of galaxies or galaxy clusters. In particular, the mass within one Einstein radius can be determined with an accuracy of order of a few percent or better, depending on the image configuration. For other radii, however, degeneracies exist between galaxy density profiles, precluding an accurate determination of the enclosed mass. The source position transformation (SPT), which includes the well-known mass-sheet transformation (MST) as a special case, describes this degeneracy of the lensing observables in a more general way. In this paper we explore properties of an SPT, removing the MST to leading order, i.e., we consider degeneracies which have not been described before. The deflection field resulting from an SPT is not curl-free…
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