112 research outputs found
CFHTLenS tomographic weak lensing: Quantifying accurate redshift distributions
The Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) comprises deep
multi-colour (u*g'r'i'z') photometry spanning 154 square degrees, with accurate
photometric redshifts and shape measurements. We demonstrate that the redshift
probability distribution function summed over galaxies provides an accurate
representation of the galaxy redshift distribution accounting for random and
catastrophic errors for galaxies with best fitting photometric redshifts z_p <
1.3.
We present cosmological constraints using tomographic weak gravitational
lensing by large-scale structure. We use two broad redshift bins 0.5 < z_p <=
0.85 and 0.85 < z_p <= 1.3 free of intrinsic alignment contamination, and
measure the shear correlation function on angular scales in the range ~1-40
arcmin. We show that the problematic redshift scaling of the shear signal,
found in previous CFHTLS data analyses, does not afflict the CFHTLenS data. For
a flat Lambda-CDM model and a fixed matter density Omega_m=0.27, we find the
normalisation of the matter power spectrum sigma_8=0.771 \pm 0.041. When
combined with cosmic microwave background data (WMAP7), baryon acoustic
oscillation data (BOSS), and a prior on the Hubble constant from the HST
distance ladder, we find that CFHTLenS improves the precision of the fully
marginalised parameter estimates by an average factor of 1.5-2. Combining our
results with the above cosmological probes, we find Omega_m=0.2762 \pm 0.0074
and sigma_8=0.802 \pm 0.013.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRA
Consistent cosmic shear in the face of systematics: a B-mode analysis of KiDS-450, DES-SV and CFHTLenS
We analyse three public cosmic shear surveys; the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS-450), the Dark Energy Survey (DES-SV) and the Canada France Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS). Adopting the âCOSEBIsâ statistic to cleanly and completely separate the lensing E-modes from the non-lensing B-modes, we detect B-modes in KiDS-450 and CFHTLenS at the level of âŒ2.7Ï. For DES-SV we detect B-modes at the level of 2.8Ï in a non-tomographic analysis, increasing to a 5.5ÏB-mode detection in a tomographic analysis. In order to understand the origin of these detected B-modes we measure the B-mode signature of a range of different simulated systematics including PSF leakage, random but correlated PSF modelling errors, camera-based additive shear bias and photometric redshift selection bias. We show that any correlation between photometric-noise and the relative orientation of the galaxy to the point-spread-function leads to an ellipticity selection bias in tomographic analyses. This work therefore introduces a new systematic for future lensing surveys to consider. We find that the B-modes in DES-SV appear similar to a superposition of the B-mode signatures from all of the systematics simulated. The KiDS-450 and CFHTLenS B-mode measurements show features that are consistent with a repeating additive shear bias
Cross-correlating Planck tSZ with RCSLenS weak lensing: implications for cosmology and AGN feedback
We present measurements of the spatial mapping between (hot) baryons and the total matter in the Universe, via the cross-correlation between the thermal SunyaevâZeldovich (tSZ)map from Planck and the weak gravitational lensing maps from theRed Cluster Sequence Lensing Survey (RCSLenS). The cross-correlations are performed on the map level where all the sources (including diffuse intergalactic gas) contribute to the signal. We consider two configurationspace correlation function estimators, Ο yâÎș and Ο yâÎłt , and a Fourier-space estimator, CyâÎș , in our analysis. We detect a significant correlation out to 3⊠of angular separation on the sky. Based on statistical noise only, we can report 13Ï and 17Ï detections of the cross-correlation using the configuration-space yâÎș and yâÎł t estimators, respectively. Including a heuristic estimate of the sampling variance yields a detection significance of 7Ï and 8Ï, respectively. A similar level of detection is obtained from the Fourier-space estimator, CyâÎș . As each estimator probes different dynamical ranges, their combination improves the significance of the detection. We compare our measurements with predictions from the cosmo-OverWhelmingly Large Simulations suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, where different galactic feedback models are implemented. We find that a model with considerable active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback that removes large quantities of hot gas from galaxy groups and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 7-yr best-fitting cosmological parameters provides the bestmatch to the measurements. All baryonic models in the context of a Planck cosmology overpredict the observed signal. Similar cosmological conclusions are drawn when we employ a halo model with the observed âuniversalâ pressure profile
Cross-correlation of weak lensing and gamma rays: implications for the nature of dark matter
We measure the cross-correlation between Fermi gamma-ray photons and over 1000 deg2 of weak lensing data from the CanadaâFranceâHawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), the Red Cluster Sequence Lensing Survey (RCSLenS), and the Kilo Degree Survey (KiDS). We present the first measurement of tomographic weak lensing cross-correlations and the first application of spectral binning to cross-correlations between gamma rays and weak lensing. The measurements are performed using an angular power spectrum estimator while the covariance is estimated using an analytical prescription. We verify the accuracy of our covariance estimate by comparing it to two internal covariance estimators. Based on the non-detection of a cross-correlation signal, we derive constraints on weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter. We compute exclusion limits on the dark matter annihilation cross-section ăÏannvă, decay rate Îdec and particle mass mDM. We find that in the absence of a cross-correlation signal, tomography does not significantly improve the constraining power of the analysis. Assuming a strong contribution to the gamma-ray flux due to small-scale clustering of dark matter and accounting for known astrophysical sources of gamma rays, we exclude the thermal relic cross-section for particle masses of mDM âČ 20 GeV
KiDS-450: cosmological constraints from weak-lensing peak statistics â II: Inference from shear peaks using N-body simulations
We study the statistics of peaks in a weak-lensing reconstructed mass map of the first 450 deg2 of the Kilo Degree Survey (KiDS-450). The map is computed with aperture masses directly applied to the shear field with an NFW-like compensated filter. We compare the peak statistics in the observations with that of simulations for various cosmologies to constrain the cosmological parameter S8=Ï8Ωm/0.3ââââââââ , which probes the (Ωm, Ï8) plane perpendicularly to its main degeneracy. We estimate S8 = 0.750 ± 0.059, using peaks in the signal-to-noise range 0 †S/N †4, and accounting for various systematics, such as multiplicative shear bias, mean redshift bias, baryon feedback, intrinsic alignment, and shearâposition coupling. These constraints are ⌠25âperâcent tighter than the constraints from the high significance peaks alone (3 †S/N †4) which typically trace single-massive haloes. This demonstrates the gain of information from low-S/N peaks. However, we find that including S/N < 0 peaks does not add further information. Our results are in good agreement with the tomographic shear two-point correlation function measurement in KiDS-450. Combining shear peaks with non-tomographic measurements of the shear two-point correlation functions yields a âŒ20âperâcent improvement in the uncertainty on S8 compared to the shear two-point correlation functions alone, highlighting the great potential of peaks as a cosmological probe
CFHTLenS: combined probe cosmological model comparison using 2D weak gravitational lensing
We present cosmological constraints from 2D weak gravitational lensing by the large-scale structure in the CanadaâFranceâHawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) which spans 154 deg^2 in five optical bands. Using accurate photometric redshifts and measured shapes for 4.2 million galaxies between redshifts of 0.2 and 1.3, we compute the 2D cosmic shear correlation function over angular scales ranging between 0.8 and 350 arcmin. Using non-linear models of the dark-matter power spectrum, we constrain cosmological parameters by exploring the parameter space with Population Monte Carlo sampling. The best constraints from lensing alone are obtained for the small-scale density-fluctuations amplitude Ï_8 scaled with the total matter density Ωm. For a flat Îcold dark matter (ÎCDM) model we obtain Ï_8(Ω_m/0.27)0.6 = 0.79 ± 0.03.
We combine the CFHTLenS data with 7-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP7), baryonic acoustic oscillations (BAO): SDSS-III (BOSS) and a Hubble Space Telescope distance-ladder prior on the Hubble constant to get joint constraints. For a flat ÎCDM model, we find Ω_m = 0.283 ± 0.010 and Ï_8 = 0.813 ± 0.014. In the case of a curved wCDM universe, we obtain Ω_m = 0.27 ± 0.03, Ï_8 = 0.83 ± 0.04, w0 = â1.10 ± 0.15 and Ω_K = 0.006^(+0.006)_(â 0.004).
We calculate the Bayesian evidence to compare flat and curved ÎCDM and dark-energy CDM models. From the combination of all four probes, we find models with curvature to be at moderately disfavoured with respect to the flat case. A simple dark-energy model is indistinguishable from ÎCDM. Our results therefore do not necessitate any deviations from the standard cosmological model
CFHTLenS: the CanadaâFranceâHawaii Telescope Lensing Survey
We present the CanadaâFranceâHawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) that accurately determines a weak gravitational lensing signal from the full 154 deg^2 of deep multicolour data obtained by the CFHT Legacy Survey. Weak gravitational lensing by large-scale structure is widely recognized as one of the most powerful but technically challenging probes of cosmology. We outline the CFHTLenS analysis pipeline, describing how and why every step of the chain from the raw pixel data to the lensing shear and photometric redshift measurement has been revised and improved compared to previous analyses of a subset of the same data. We present a novel method to identify data which contributes a non-negligible contamination to our sample and quantify the required level of calibration for the survey. Through a series of cosmology-insensitive tests we demonstrate the robustness of the resulting cosmic shear signal, presenting a science-ready shear and photometric redshift catalogue for future exploitation
RCSLenS: testing gravitational physics through the cross-correlation of weak lensing and large-scale structure
The unknown nature of âdark energyâ motivates continued cosmological tests of large-scale gravitational physics. We present a new consistency check based on the relative amplitude of non-relativistic galaxy peculiar motions, measured via redshift-space distortion, and the relativistic deflection of light by those same galaxies traced by galaxyâgalaxy lensing. We take advantage of the latest generation of deep, overlapping imaging and spectroscopic data sets, combining the Red Cluster Sequence Lensing Survey, the CanadaâFranceâHawaii Telescope Lensing Survey, the WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey and the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey. We quantify the results using the âgravitational slipâ statistic EG, which we estimate as 0.48 ± 0.10 at z = 0.32 and 0.30 ± 0.07 at z = 0.57, the latter constituting the highest redshift at which this quantity has been determined. These measurements are consistent with the predictions of General Relativity, for a perturbed FriedmannâRobertsonâWalker metric in a Universe dominated by a cosmological constant, which are EG = 0.41 and 0.36 at these respective redshifts. The combination of redshift-space distortion and gravitational lensing data from current and future galaxy surveys will offer increasingly stringent tests of fundamental cosmology
RCSLenS: testing gravitational physics through the cross-correlation of weak lensing and large-scale structure
The unknown nature of dark energy motivates continued cosmological tests of
large-scale gravitational physics. We present a new consistency check based on
the relative amplitude of non-relativistic galaxy peculiar motions, measured
via redshift-space distortion, and the relativistic deflection of light by
those same galaxies traced by galaxy-galaxy lensing. We take advantage of the
latest generation of deep, overlapping imaging and spectroscopic datasets,
combining the Red Cluster Sequence Lensing Survey (RCSLenS), the
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), the WiggleZ Dark
Energy Survey and the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). We
quantify the results using the "gravitational slip" statistic E_G, which we
estimate as 0.48 +/- 0.10 at z=0.32 and 0.30 +/- 0.07 at z=0.57, the latter
constituting the highest redshift at which this quantity has been determined.
These measurements are consistent with the predictions of General Relativity,
for a perturbed Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric in a Universe dominated by a
cosmological constant, which are E_G = 0.41 and 0.36 at these respective
redshifts. The combination of redshift-space distortion and gravitational
lensing data from current and future galaxy surveys will offer increasingly
stringent tests of fundamental cosmology.Comment: 25 pages, 24 figures, version accepted for publication by MNRAS,
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