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GREAT3 results - I. Systematic errors in shear estimation and the impact of real galaxy morphology

Authors :
Mandelbaum, Rachel
Rowe, Barnaby
Armstrong, Robert
Bard, Deborah
Bertin, Emmanuel
Bosch, James
Boutigny, Dominique
Courbin, Frederic
Dawson, William A.
Donnarumma, Annamaria
Fenech Conti, Ian
Gavazzi, Raphaël
Gentile, Marc
Gill, Mandeep S. S.
Hogg, David W.
Huff, Eric M.
Jee, M. James
Kacprzak, Tomasz
Kilbinger, Martin
Kuntzer, Thibault
Lang, Dustin
Luo, Wentao
March, Marisa C.
Marshall, Philip J.
Meyers, Joshua E.
Miller, Lance
Miyatake, Hironao
Nakajima, Reiko
Ngolé Mboula, Fred Maurice
Nurbaeva, Guldariya
Okura, Yuki
Paulin-Henriksson, Stéphane
Rhodes, Jason
Schneider, Michael D.
Shan, Huanyuan
Sheldon, Erin S.
Simet, Melanie
Starck, Jean-Luc
Sureau, Florent
Tewes, Malte
Zarb Adami, Kristian
Zhang, Jun
Zuntz, Joe
Mandelbaum, Rachel
Rowe, Barnaby
Armstrong, Robert
Bard, Deborah
Bertin, Emmanuel
Bosch, James
Boutigny, Dominique
Courbin, Frederic
Dawson, William A.
Donnarumma, Annamaria
Fenech Conti, Ian
Gavazzi, Raphaël
Gentile, Marc
Gill, Mandeep S. S.
Hogg, David W.
Huff, Eric M.
Jee, M. James
Kacprzak, Tomasz
Kilbinger, Martin
Kuntzer, Thibault
Lang, Dustin
Luo, Wentao
March, Marisa C.
Marshall, Philip J.
Meyers, Joshua E.
Miller, Lance
Miyatake, Hironao
Nakajima, Reiko
Ngolé Mboula, Fred Maurice
Nurbaeva, Guldariya
Okura, Yuki
Paulin-Henriksson, Stéphane
Rhodes, Jason
Schneider, Michael D.
Shan, Huanyuan
Sheldon, Erin S.
Simet, Melanie
Starck, Jean-Luc
Sureau, Florent
Tewes, Malte
Zarb Adami, Kristian
Zhang, Jun
Zuntz, Joe
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present first results from the third GRavitational lEnsing Accuracy Testing (GREAT3) challenge, the third in a sequence of challenges for testing methods of inferring weak gravitational lensing shear distortions from simulated galaxy images. GREAT3 was divided into experiments to test three specific questions, and included simulated space- and ground-based data with constant or cosmologically varying shear fields. The simplest (control) experiment included parametric galaxies with a realistic distribution of signal-to-noise, size, and ellipticity, and a complex point spread function (PSF). The other experiments tested the additional impact of realistic galaxy morphology, multiple exposure imaging, and the uncertainty about a spatially varying PSF; the last two questions will be explored in Paper II. The 24 participating teams competed to estimate lensing shears to within systematic error tolerances for upcoming Stage-IV dark energy surveys, making 1525 submissions overall. GREAT3 saw considerable variety and innovation in the types of methods applied. Several teams now meet or exceed the targets in many of the tests conducted (to within the statistical errors). We conclude that the presence of realistic galaxy morphology in simulations changes shear calibration biases by ∼1percent for a wide range of methods. Other effects such as truncation biases due to finite galaxy postage stamps, and the impact of galaxy type as measured by the Sérsic index, are quantified for the first time. Our results generalize previous studies regarding sensitivities to galaxy size and signal-to-noise, and to PSF properties such as seeing and defocus. Almost all methods' results support the simple model in which additive shear biases depend linearly on PSF ellipticity

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1156689141
Document Type :
Electronic Resource