KiDS-SQuaD: The KiDS Strongly lensed Quasar Detection project
C. Spiniello, A. Agnello, N. R. Napolitano, A. V. Sergeyev, F. I., Getman, C. Tortora, M. Spavone, M. Bilicki, H. Buddelmeijer, L.V.E. Koopmans,, K.Kuijken, G. Vernardos, E. Bannikova, M. Capaccioli

TL;DR
This study compares three methods for detecting strongly lensed quasars in the KiDS survey, successfully recovering most known lenses and identifying new high-grade candidates for follow-up.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of morphology- and photometry-based lens detection methods, highlighting their complementarities and effectiveness in a large survey.
Findings
Recovered 7 out of 10 known lenses in KiDS DR3
Combined methods improved detection success rate
First confirmed lensed quasar from KiDS, KiDS 1042+0023
Abstract
New methods have been recently developed to search for strong gravitational lenses, in particular lensed quasars, in wide-field imaging surveys. Here, we compare the performance of three different, morphology- and photometry- based methods to find lens candidates over the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) DR3 footprint (440 deg). The three methods are: i) a multiplet detection in KiDS-DR3 and/or Gaia-DR1, ii) direct modeling of KiDS cutouts and iii) positional offsets between different surveys (KiDS-vs-Gaia, Gaia-vs-2MASS), with purpose-built astrometric recalibrations. The first benchmark for the methods has been set by the recovery of known lenses. We are able to recover seven out of ten known lenses and pairs of quasars observed in the KiDS DR3 footprint, or eight out of ten with improved selection criteria and looser colour pre-selection. This success rate reflects the combination of…
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