17 research outputs found
A study of the sensitivity of shape measurements to the input parameters of weak lensing image simulations
Improvements in the accuracy of shape measurements are essential to exploit
the statistical power of planned imaging surveys that aim to constrain
cosmological parameters using weak lensing by large-scale structure. Although a
range of tests can be performed using the measurements, the performance of the
algorithm can only be quantified using simulated images. This yields, however,
only meaningful results if the simulated images resemble the real observations
sufficiently well. In this paper we explore the sensitivity of the
multiplicative bias to the input parameters of Euclid-like image simulations.We
find that algorithms will need to account for the local density of sources. In
particular the impact of galaxies below the detection limit warrants further
study, because magnification changes their number density, resulting in
correlations between the lensing signal and multiplicative bias. Although
achieving sub-percent accuracy will require further study, we estimate that
sufficient archival Hubble Space Telescope data are available to create
realistic populations of galaxies.Comment: 18 pages, accepted for publications in MNRA
Evolution of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation of LRGs from a combined SDSS-DR10+RCS2 analysis
We study the evolution of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation of Luminous
Red Galaxies (LRGs). We select a sample of 52 000 LOWZ and CMASS LRGs from the
Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) SDSS-DR10 in the ~450 deg^2 that
overlaps with imaging data from the second Red-sequence Cluster Survey (RCS2),
group them into bins of absolute magnitude and redshift and measure their weak
lensing signals. The source redshift distribution has a median of 0.7, which
allows us to study the lensing signal as a function of lens redshift. We
interpret the lensing signal using a halo model, from which we obtain the halo
masses as well as the normalisations of the mass-concentration relations. We
find that the concentration of haloes that host LRGs is consistent with dark
matter only simulations once we allow for miscentering or satellites in the
modelling. The slope of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation has a typical
value of 1.4 and does not change with redshift, but we do find evidence for a
change in amplitude: the average halo mass of LOWZ galaxies increases by
25_{-14}^{+16} % between z=0.36 and 0.22 to an average value of 6.43+/-0.52 x
10^13 h70^-1 Msun. If we extend the redshift range using the CMASS galaxies and
assume that they are the progenitors of the LOWZ sample, we find that the
average mass of LRGs increases by 80^{+39}_{-28} % between z=0.6 and 0.2Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Canadian Cluster Comparison Project: detailed study of systematics and updated weak lensing masses
Masses of clusters of galaxies from weak gravitational lensing analyses of
ever larger samples are increasingly used as the reference to which baryonic
scaling relations are compared. In this paper we revisit the analysis of a
sample of 50 clusters studied as part of the Canadian Cluster Comparison
Project. We examine the key sources of systematic error in cluster masses. We
quantify the robustness of our shape measurements and calibrate our algorithm
empirically using extensive image simulations. The source redshift distribution
is revised using the latest state-of-the-art photometric redshift catalogs that
include new deep near-infrared observations. Nonetheless we find that the
uncertainty in the determination of photometric redshifts is the largest source
of systematic error for our mass estimates. We use our updated masses to
determine b, the bias in the hydrostatic mass, for the clusters detected by
Planck. Our results suggest 1-b=0.76+-0.05(stat)}+-0.06(syst)}, which does not
resolve the tension with the measurements from the primary cosmic microwave
background.Comment: resubmitted to MNRAS after review by refere
Brightest Cluster Galaxies Trace Weak Lensing Mass Bias and Halo Triaxiality in The Three Hundred Project
Galaxy clusters have a triaxial matter distribution. The weak-lensing signal,
an important part in cosmological studies, measures the projected mass of all
matter along the line-of-sight, and therefore changes with the orientation of
the cluster. Studies suggest that the shape of the brightest cluster galaxy
(BCG) in the centre of the cluster traces the underlying halo shape, enabling a
method to account for projection effects. We use 324 simulated clusters at four
redshifts between 0.1 and 0.6 from `The Three Hundred Project' to quantify
correlations between the orientation and shape of the BCG and the halo. We find
that haloes and their embedded BCGs are aligned, with an average 20
degree angle between their major axes. The bias in weak lensing cluster mass
estimates correlates with the orientation of both the halo and the BCG.
Mimicking observations, we compute the projected shape of the BCG, as a measure
of the BCG orientation, and find that it is most strongly correlated to the
weak-lensing mass for relaxed clusters. We also test a 2-dimensional cluster
relaxation proxy measured from BCG mass isocontours. The concentration of
stellar mass in the projected BCG core compared to the total stellar mass
provides an alternative proxy for the BCG orientation. We find that the
concentration does not correlate to the weak-lensing mass bias, but does
correlate with the true halo mass. These results indicate that the BCG shape
and orientation for large samples of relaxed clusters can provide information
to improve weak-lensing mass estimates.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, Figure 7 is key plot, Updated to match version
accepted by MNRA
Towards emulating cosmic shear data:Revisiting the calibration of the shear measurements for the Kilo-Degree Survey
Exploiting the full statistical power of future cosmic shear surveys will
necessitate improvements to the accuracy with which the gravitational lensing
signal is measured. We present a framework for calibrating shear with image
simulations that demonstrates the importance of including realistic
correlations between galaxy morphology, size and more importantly, photometric
redshifts. This realism is essential so that selection and shape measurement
biases can be calibrated accurately for a tomographic cosmic shear analysis. We
emulate Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) observations of the COSMOS field using
morphological information from {\it Hubble} Space Telescope imaging, faithfully
reproducing the measured galaxy properties from KiDS observations of the same
field. We calibrate our shear measurements from lensfit, and find through a
range of sensitivity tests that lensfit is robust and unbiased within the
allowed 2 per cent tolerance of our study. Our results show that the
calibration has to be performed by selecting the tomographic samples in the
simulations, consistent with the actual cosmic shear analysis, because the
joint distributions of galaxy properties are found to vary with redshift.
Ignoring this redshift variation could result in misestimating the shear bias
by an amount that exceeds the allowed tolerance. To improve the calibration for
future cosmic shear analyses, it will be essential to also correctly account
for the measurement of photometric redshifts, which requires simulating
multi-band observations.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
Matches the published versio
KiDS-450: testing extensions to the standard cosmological model
We test extensions to the standard cosmological model with weak gravitational
lensing tomography using 450 deg of imaging data from the Kilo Degree
Survey (KiDS). In these extended cosmologies, which include massive neutrinos,
nonzero curvature, evolving dark energy, modified gravity, and running of the
scalar spectral index, we also examine the discordance between KiDS and cosmic
microwave background measurements from Planck. The discordance between the two
datasets is largely unaffected by a more conservative treatment of the lensing
systematics and the removal of angular scales most sensitive to nonlinear
physics. The only extended cosmology that simultaneously alleviates the
discordance with Planck and is at least moderately favored by the data includes
evolving dark energy with a time-dependent equation of state (in the form of
the parameterization). In this model, the respective constraints agree at the level, and there
is `substantial concordance' between the KiDS and Planck datasets when
accounting for the full parameter space. Moreover, the Planck constraint on the
Hubble constant is wider than in LCDM and in agreement with the Riess et al.
(2016) direct measurement of . The dark energy model is moderately favored
as compared to LCDM when combining the KiDS and Planck measurements, and
remains moderately favored after including an informative prior on the Hubble
constant. In both of these scenarios, marginalized constraints in the
plane are discrepant with a cosmological constant at the level.
Moreover, KiDS constrains the sum of neutrino masses to 4.0 eV (95% CL), finds
no preference for time or scale dependent modifications to the metric
potentials, and is consistent with flatness and no running of the spectral
index. The analysis code is public at https://github.com/sjoudaki/kids450Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures, results unchanged, version accepted for
publication by MNRA
The third data release of the Kilo-Degree Survey and associated data products
The Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) is an ongoing optical wide-field imaging survey
with the OmegaCAM camera at the VLT Survey Telescope. It aims to image 1500
square degrees in four filters (ugri). The core science driver is mapping the
large-scale matter distribution in the Universe, using weak lensing shear and
photometric redshift measurements. Further science cases include galaxy
evolution, Milky Way structure, detection of high-redshift clusters, and
finding rare sources such as strong lenses and quasars. Here we present the
third public data release (DR3) and several associated data products, adding
further area, homogenized photometric calibration, photometric redshifts and
weak lensing shear measurements to the first two releases. A dedicated pipeline
embedded in the Astro-WISE information system is used for the production of the
main release. Modifications with respect to earlier releases are described in
detail. Photometric redshifts have been derived using both Bayesian template
fitting, and machine-learning techniques. For the weak lensing measurements,
optimized procedures based on the THELI data reduction and lensfit shear
measurement packages are used. In DR3 stacked ugri images, weight maps, masks,
and source lists for 292 new survey tiles (~300 sq.deg) are made available. The
multi-band catalogue, including homogenized photometry and photometric
redshifts, covers the combined DR1, DR2 and DR3 footprint of 440 survey tiles
(447 sq.deg). Limiting magnitudes are typically 24.3, 25.1, 24.9, 23.8 (5 sigma
in a 2 arcsec aperture) in ugri, respectively, and the typical r-band PSF size
is less than 0.7 arcsec. The photometric homogenization scheme ensures accurate
colors and an absolute calibration stable to ~2% for gri and ~3% in u.
Separately released are a weak lensing shear catalogue and photometric
redshifts based on two different machine-learning techniques.Comment: small modifications; 27 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication
in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Shear nulling after PSF Gaussianisation: Moment-based weak lensing measurements with subpercent noise bias
Context. Current optical imaging surveys for cosmology cover large areas of sky. Exploiting the statistical power of these surveys for weak lensing measurements requires shape measurement methods with subpercent systematic errors.
Aims. We introduce a new weak lensing shear measurement algorithm, shear nulling after PSF Gaussianisation (SNAPG), designed to avoid the noise biases that affect most other methods.
Methods. SNAPG operates on images that have been convolved with a kernel that renders the point spread function (PSF) a circular Gaussian, and uses weighted second moments of the sources. The response of such second moments to a shear of the pre-seeing galaxy image can be predicted analytically, allowing us to construct a shear nulling scheme that finds the shear parameters for which the observed galaxies are consistent with an unsheared, isotropically oriented population of sources. The inverse of this nulling shear is then an estimate of the gravitational lensing shear.
Results. We identify the uncertainty of the estimated centre of each galaxy as the source of noise bias, and incorporate an approximate estimate of the centroid covariance into the scheme. We test the method on extensive suites of simulated galaxies of increasing complexity, and find that it is capable of shear measurements with multiplicative bias below 0.5 percent