Standard cosmology has many successes on large scales, but faces some
fundamental difficulties on small, galactic scales. One such difficulty is the
cusp/core problem. High resolution observations of the rotation curves for dark
matter dominated low surface brightness (LSB) galaxies imply that galactic dark
matter halos have a density profile with a flat central core, whereas N-body
structure formation simulations predict a divergent (cuspy) density profile at
the center. It has been proposed that this problem can be resolved by stellar
feedback driving turbulent gas motion that erases the initial cusp. However,
strong gravitational lensing prefers a cuspy density profile for galactic
halos. In this paper, we use the most recent high resolution observations of
the rotation curves of LSB galaxies to fit the core size as a function of halo
mass, and compare the resultant lensing probability to the observational
results for the well defined combined sample of the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey
(CLASS) and Jodrell Bank/Very Large Array Astrometric Survey (JVAS). The
lensing probabilities based on such density profiles are too low to match the
observed lensing in CLASS/JVAS. High baryon densities in the galaxies that
dominate the lensing statistics can reconcile this discrepancy, but only if
they steepen the mass profile rather than making it more shallow. This places
contradictory demands upon the effects of baryons on the central mass profiles
of galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Largely improved compared with the version 1 to
reflect the referees' reports, conclusions unchanged. Published in Research
in Astronomy and Astrophysics (RAA