Investigation of mass substructure in gravitational lens system SDP.81 with ALMA long-baseline observations
H. R. Stacey, D. M. Powell, S. Vegetti, J. P. McKean, and D. Wen

TL;DR
This study reanalyzes ALMA observations of gravitational lens SDP.81, finding no evidence for previously claimed low-mass dark matter sub-haloes but highlighting the importance of detailed lens modeling and angular structure considerations.
Contribution
The paper critically assesses previous sub-halo detections in SDP.81, emphasizing the role of lens angular structure and smooth model fitting in gravitational lens analysis.
Findings
No evidence for previously reported sub-haloes in the data.
Angular structure beyond an elliptical profile improves lens modeling.
Proper modeling can distinguish between sub-halo signals and multipole effects.
Abstract
The prevalence and properties of low-mass dark matter haloes serve as a crucial test for understanding the nature of dark matter, and may be constrained through the gravitational deflection of strongly lensed arcs. Previous studies found evidence for the presence of low-mass dark matter haloes in observations of the gravitationally lensed, dusty star-forming galaxy SDP.81, using the Atacama Large Millimetre/sub-millimetre Array (ALMA). In this work, we analyse these observations to assess the robustness of these reported results. While our analysis indicates that the data support additional angular structure in the lensing mass distribution beyond an elliptical power-law density profile, we do not find evidence for two previously reported sub-halo detections. However, we verify with realistic mock data that we could have found evidence in favour of a previously reported $\approx…
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