H0LiCOW III. Quantifying the effect of mass along the line of sight to the gravitational lens HE 0435-1223 through weighted galaxy counts
Cristian E. Rusu, Christopher D. Fassnacht, Dominique Sluse, Stefan, Hilbert, Kenneth C. Wong, Kuang-Han Huang, Sherry H. Suyu, Thomas E. Collett,, Philip J. Marshall, Tommaso Treu, Leon V. E. Koopmans

TL;DR
This study quantifies the external mass effects along the line of sight to the gravitational lens HE 0435-1223, reducing uncertainties in cosmological measurements derived from time delay observations.
Contribution
It introduces a robust method to estimate the external convergence using galaxy counts, redshift, and stellar mass, validated through simulations and applied to a key lens system.
Findings
Median external convergence $rac{ext}{ext}$ = 0.004 with 2.5% uncertainty
Uncertainty in rac{ext}{ext} translates to 2.5% uncertainty in Hubble constant
Method remains robust across different observational parameters
Abstract
Based on spectroscopy and multiband wide-field observations of the gravitationally lensed quasar HE 0435-1223, we determine the probability distribution function of the external convergence for this system. We measure the under/overdensity of the line of sight towards the lens system and compare it to the average line of sight throughout the universe, determined by using the CFHTLenS as a control field. Aiming to constrain as tightly as possible, we determine under/overdensities using various combinations of relevant informative weighing schemes for the galaxy counts, such as projected distance to the lens, redshift, and stellar mass. We then convert the measured under/overdensities into a distribution, using ray-tracing through the Millennium Simulation. We explore several limiting magnitudes and apertures, and account…
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