4.7 Article

The Initial Mass Function in the Nearest Strong Lenses from SNELLS: Assessing the Consistency of Lensing, Dynamical, and Spectroscopic Constraints

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 845, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa816d

Keywords

galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD; galaxies: stellar content; gravitational lensing: strong

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/L00075X/1]
  2. NASA [NNX15AK14G]
  3. NSF [AST-1313280]
  4. Packard Foundation
  5. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  6. [095.B-0736]

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We present new observations of the three nearest early-type galaxy (ETG) strong lenses discovered in the SINFONI Nearby Elliptical Lens Locator Survey (SNELLS). Based on their lensing masses, these ETGs were inferred to have a stellar initial mass function ( IMF) consistent with that of the Milky Way, not the bottom-heavy IMF that has been reported as typical for high-sigma ETGs based on lensing, dynamical, and stellar population synthesis techniques. We use these unique systems to test the consistency of IMF estimates derived from different methods. We first estimate the stellar M*/L using lensing and stellar dynamics. We then fit high-quality optical spectra of the lenses using an updated version of the stellar population synthesis models developed by Conroy & van Dokkum. When examined individually, we find good agreement among these methods for one galaxy. The other two galaxies show 2-3 sigma tension with lensing estimates, depending on the dark matter contribution, when considering IMFs that extend to 0.08M(circle dot). Allowing a variable low-mass cutoff or a nonparametric form of the IMF reduces the tension among the IMF estimates to <2 sigma. There is moderate evidence for a reduced number of low-mass stars in the SNELLS spectra, but no such evidence in a composite spectrum of matched-sigma ETGs drawn from the SDSS. Such variation in the form of the IMF at low stellar masses (m less than or similar to 0.3M(circle dot)), if present, could reconcile lensing/dynamical and spectroscopic IMF estimates for the SNELLS lenses and account for their lighter M*/L relative to the mean matched-sigma ETG. We provide the spectra used in this study to facilitate future comparisons.

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