Cosmography from accurate mass modeling of the lens group SDSS J0100+1818: five sources at three different redshifts
A. Bolamperti, C. Grillo, G.B. Caminha, G. Granata, S.H. Suyu, R., Ca\~nameras, L. Christensen, J. Vernet, A. Zanella

TL;DR
This study uses detailed mass modeling of a strong lensing system with multiple sources at different redshifts to measure cosmological parameters, confirming the potential of group-scale lenses for cosmology.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed mass and cosmological parameter measurements from a group-scale lens with five sources at three redshifts, using new MUSE data and multi-plane lensing analysis.
Findings
Measured $oldsymbol{ ext{Ω}_m}$ consistent with cosmological models.
Estimated total mass of the lens system as $(1.55 imes 10^{13})$ M$_ ext{⊙}$.
Demonstrated the effectiveness of group-scale lenses for cosmological constraints.
Abstract
Systems where multiple sources at different redshifts are strongly lensed by the same deflector allow one to directly investigate the evolution of the angular diameter distances with redshift, and thus to learn about the geometry of the Universe. We present measurements of the values of the total matter density, , and of the dark energy equation of state parameter, , through a strong lensing analysis of SDSSJ0100+1818, a group-scale system at with five lensed sources, from to . We use new MUSE data to securely measure the redshift of 65 sources, including the five multiply imaged background sources (lensed into a total of 18 multiple images) and 19 galaxies on the deflector plane (the brightest group galaxy, BGG, and 18 fainter members), all employed to build robust strong lensing models with the software GLEE. We measure $\Omega_m =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
