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Forward modeling fluctuations in the DESI LRGs target sample using image simulations

Authors :
Kong, Hui
Ross, Ashley J.
Honscheid, Klaus
Lang, Dustin
Porredon, Anna
de Mattia, Arnaud
Rezaie, Mehdi
Zhou, Rongpu
Schlafly, Edward
Moustakas, John
Rosado-Marin, Alberto
Aguilar, Jessica Nicole
Ahlen, Steven
Brooks, David
Chaussidon, Edmond
Claybaugh, Todd
Cole, Shaun
de la Macorra, Axel
Dey, Arjun
Dey, Biprateep
Doel, Peter
Fanning, Kevin
Forero-Romero, Jaime E.
Gaztanaga, Enrique
Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A
Gutierrez, Gaston
Howlett, Cullan
Juneau, Stephanie
Kremin, Anthony
Landriau, Martin
Levi, Michael
Manera, Marc
Martini, Paul
Meisner, Aaron
Miquel, Ramon
Mueller, Eva-Maria
Myers, Adam
Newman, Jeffrey A.
Nie, Jundan
Niz, Gustavo
Percival, Will
Poppett, Claire
Prada, Francisco
Rossi, Graziano
Sanchez, Eusebio
Schlegel, David
Schubnell, Michael
Seo, Hee-Jong
Sprayberry, David
Tarle, Gregory
Magana, Mariana Vargas
Weaver, Benjamin Alan
Zou, Hu
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We use the forward modeling pipeline, Obiwan, to study the imaging systematics of the Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs) targeted by the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). We update the Obiwan pipeline, which had previously been developed to simulate the optical images used to target DESI data, to further simulate WISE images in the infrared. This addition makes it possible to simulate the DESI LRGs sample, which utilizes WISE data in the target selection. Deep DESI imaging data combined with a method to account for biases in their shapes is used to define a truth sample of potential LRG targets. We simulate a total of 15 million galaxies to obtain a simulated LRG sample (Obiwan LRGs) that predicts the variations in target density due to imaging properties. We find that the simulations predict the trends with depth observed in the data, including how they depend on the intrinsic brightness of the galaxies. We observe that faint LRGs are the main contributing power of the imaging systematics trend induced by depth. We also find significant trends in the data against Galactic extinction that are not predicted by Obiwan. These trends depend strongly on the particular map of Galactic extinction chosen to test against, implying Large-Scale Structure systematic contamination (e.g. Cosmic-Infrared Background) in the Galactic extinction maps is a likely root cause. We additionally observe that the DESI LRGs sample exhibits a complex dependency on a combination of seeing, depth, and intrinsic galaxy brightness, which is not replicated by Obiwan, suggesting discrepancies between the current simulation settings and the actual observations. The detailed findings we present should be used to guide any observational systematics mitigation treatment for the clustering of the DESI LRG sample.<br />Comment: 46 pages, 26 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.16299
Document Type :
Working Paper