AGEL: Is the Conflict Real? Investigating Galaxy Evolution Models using Strong Lensing at 0.3 < z < 0.9
Nandini Sahu, Kim-Vy Tran, Sherry H. Suyu, Anowar J. Shajib, Sebastian, Ertl, Glenn G. Kacprzak, Karl Glazebrook, Tucker Jones, Keerthi Vasan G.C.,, Tania M. Barone, A. Makai Baker, Hannah Skobe, Caro Derkenne, Geraint F., Lewis, Sarah M. Sweet, and Sebastian Lopez

TL;DR
This study models the total mass distribution of seven galaxy lenses at redshifts 0.3 to 0.9 using strong lensing data, finding no evolution in the density profile slope with redshift up to 1, which challenges some previous studies.
Contribution
It presents new lens models for galaxies at higher redshifts and compares observed and predicted velocity dispersions to test galaxy evolution theories.
Findings
Average density profile slope of -1.95 ± 0.09
No observed evolution of the gamma-z relation at z<1
Results are consistent with some models but differ from others suggesting evolution.
Abstract
Observed evolution of the total mass distribution with redshift is crucial to testing galaxy evolution theories. To measure the total mass distribution, strong gravitational lenses complement the resolved dynamical observations currently limited to . Here we present the lens models for a pilot sample of seven galaxy-scale lenses from the ASTRO3D Galaxy Evolution with Lenses (AGEL) survey. The AGEL lenses, modeled using HST/WFC3-F140W images with Gravitational Lens Efficient Explorer (GLEE) software, have deflector redshifts between . Assuming a power-law density profile with slope , we measure the total density profile for the deflector galaxies via lens modeling. We also measure the stellar velocity dispersions () for four lenses and obtain from SDSS-BOSS for the remaining lenses to test our lens…
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