While usually cosmological initial conditions are assumed to be Gaussian,
inflationary theories can predict a certain amount of primordial
non-Gaussianity which can have an impact on the statistical properties of the
lensing observables. In order to evaluate this effect, we build a large set of
realistic maps of different lensing quantities starting from light-cones
extracted from large dark-matter only N-body simulations with initial
conditions corresponding to different levels of primordial local
non-Gaussianity strength fNL. Considering various statistical
quantities (PDF, power spectrum, shear in aperture, skewness and bispectrum) we
find that the effect produced by the presence of primordial non-Gaussianity is
relatively small, being of the order of few per cent for values of ∣fNL∣ compatible with the present CMB constraints and reaching at most 10-15
per cent for the most extreme cases with ∣fNL∣=1000. We also discuss
the degeneracy of this effect with the uncertainties due to the power spectrum
normalization σ8 and matter density parameter Ωm, finding
that an error in the determination of σ8 (Ωm) of about 3
(10) per cent gives differences comparable with non-Gaussian models having
fNL=±1000. These results suggest that the possible presence of an
amount of primordial non-Gaussianity corresponding to ∣fNL∣=100 is not
hampering a robust determination of the main cosmological parameters in present
and future weak lensing surveys, while a positive detection of deviations from
the Gaussian hypothesis is possible only breaking the degeneracy with other
cosmological parameters and using data from deep surveys covering a large
fraction of the sky.Comment: accepted by MNRA