The distance sum rule from strong lensing systems and quasars - test of cosmic curvature and beyond
Jing-Zhao Qi, Shuo Cao, Sixuan Zhang, Marek Biesiada, Yan Wu and, Zong-Hong Zhu

TL;DR
This study uses strong lensing systems and quasars to test cosmic curvature, showing model dependence and future potential for high-precision constraints comparable to Planck 2015.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining strong lensing and quasars to constrain cosmic curvature and assesses the impact of lens models and future survey data.
Findings
Lens model choice significantly affects curvature constraints.
Division by lens mass has little impact on results.
Future surveys could measure curvature with precision comparable to Planck.
Abstract
Testing the distance-sum-rule in strong lensing systems provides an interesting method to determine the curvature parameter using more local objects. In this paper, we apply this method to a quite recent data set of strong lensing systems in combination with intermediate-luminosity quasars calibrated as standard rulers. In the framework of three types of lens models extensively used in strong lensing studies (SIS model, power-law spherical model, and extended power-law lens model), we show that the assumed lens model has a considerable impact on the cosmic curvature constraint, which is found to be compatible or marginally compatible with the flat case (depending on the lens model adopted). Analysis of low, intermediate and high-mass sub-samples defined according to the lens velocity dispersion demonstrates that, although it is not reasonable to characterize all lenses with a…
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