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Improving weak lensing mass map reconstructions using Gaussian and sparsity priors: Application to DES SV

Authors :
Jeffrey, Niall
Abdalla, Filipe B.
Lahav, Ofer
Lanusse, Francois
Starck, Jean-Luc
Leonard, A.
Kirk, Donnacha
Chang, C.
Baxter, Eric
Kacprzak, Tomasz
Seitz, Stella
Vikram, Vinu
Whiteway, Lorne
Abbott, Timothy M.C.
Allam, Sahar
Avila, Santiago
Bertin, Emmanuel
Brooks, David
Carnero Rosell, Aurelio
Carrasco Kind, Matias
Carretero, Jorge
Castander, Francisco J.
Crocce, Martin
Cunha, Carlos E.
D'Andrea, Chris B.
Da Costa, Luiz N.
Davis, Christopher
De Vicente, Juan
Desai, Shantanu
Doel, Peter
Eifler, Tim F.
Evrard, August E.
Flaugher, Brenna
Fosalba, Pablo
Frieman, Josh
Garcia-Bellido, Juan
Gerdes, David W.
Gruen, Daniel
Gruendl, Robert A.
Gschwend, Julia
Gutierrez, Gaston
Hartley, William G.
Honscheid, Klaus
Hoyle, Ben
James, D.J.
Jarvis, Mike
Kuehn, Kyler
Lima, M.
Lin, H.
March, Marisa
Melchior, Peter
Menanteau, Felipe
Miquel, R.
Plazas, Andrés A.
Reil, Kevin
Roodman, Aaron
Sanchez, E.
Scarpine, Victor
Schubnell, Michael
Sevilla-Noarbe, Ignacio
Smith, M.
Soares-Santos, Marcelle
Sobreira, Flavia
Suchyta, Eric
Swanson, Molly E.C.
Tarle, Gregory
Hänsli, Thomas Daniel
Walker, Alistair R.
DES Collaboration
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 479 (3)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2018.

Abstract

Mapping the underlying density field, including non-visible dark matter, using weak gravitational lensing measurements is now a standard tool in cosmology. Due to its importance to the science results of current and upcoming surveys, the quality of the convergence reconstruction methods should be well understood. We compare three methods: Kaiser–Squires (KS), Wiener filter, and Glimpse. Kaiser–Squires is a direct inversion, not accounting for survey masks or noise. The Wiener filter is well-motivated for Gaussian density fields in a Bayesian framework. Glimpse uses sparsity, aiming to reconstruct non-linearities in the density field. We compare these methods with several tests using public Dark Energy Survey (DES) Science Verification (SV) data and realistic DES simulations. The Wiener filter and Glimpse offer substantial improvements over smoothed Kaiser–Squires with a range of metrics. Both the Wiener filter and Glimpse convergence reconstructions show a 12 per cent improvement in Pearson correlation with the underlying truth from simulations. To compare the mapping methods’ abilities to find mass peaks, we measure the difference between peak counts from simulated ΛCDM shear catalogues and catalogues with no mass fluctuations (a standard data vector when inferring cosmology from peak statistics); the maximum signal-to-noise of these peak statistics is increased by a factor of 3.5 for the Wiener filter and 9 for Glimpse. With simulations, we measure the reconstruction of the harmonic phases; the phase residuals’ concentration is improved 17 per cent by Glimpse and 18 per cent by the Wiener filter. The correlationbetween reconstructions from data and foreground redMaPPer clusters is increased 18 per cent by the Wiener filter and 32 per cent by Glimpse.<br />Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 479 (3)<br />ISSN:0035-8711<br />ISSN:1365-2966<br />ISSN:1365-8711

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711 and 13652966
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 479 (3)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....512dbef84a4c9ea66e7c3e6f5c63afd9