We analyze a new gravitational lens, OAC-GL J1223-1239, serendipitously found
in a deep I-band image of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for
Surveys (ACS). The lens is a L_*, edge-on S0 galaxy at z=0.4656. The
gravitational arc has a radius of 0.42 arcsec. We have determined the total
mass and the dark matter (DM) fraction within the Einstein radius as a function
of the lensed source redshift, which is presently unknown. For z ~ 1.3, which
is in the middle of the redshift range plausible for the source according to
some external constraints, we find the central velocity dispersion to be ~180
km/s. With this value, close to that obtained by means of the Faber-Jackson
relation at the lens redshift, we compute a 30% DM fraction within the Einstein
radius (given the uncertainty in the source redshift, the allowed range for the
DM fraction is 25-35 % in our lensing model). When compared with the galaxies
in the local Universe, the lensing galaxy, OAC-GL J1223-1239 seems to fall in
the transition regime between massive DM dominated galaxies and lower-mass, DM
deficient systems.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Ap