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The Shear Testing Programme - I. Weak lensing analysis of simulated ground-based observations

Heymans, C.; Van Waerbeke, L.; Bacon, D.; Berge, J.; Bernstein, G.; Bertin, E.; Bridle, S.; Brown, M.L.; Clowe, D.; Dahle, H.; Erben, T.; Gray, M.; Hetterscheidt, M.; Hoekstra, H.; Hudelot, P.; Jarvis, M.; Kuijken, K.; Margoniner, V.; Massey, R.; Mellier, Y.; Nakajima, R.; Refregier, A.; Rhodes, J.; Schrabback, T.; Wittman, D.

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Authors

C. Heymans

L. Van Waerbeke

D. Bacon

J. Berge

G. Bernstein

E. Bertin

S. Bridle

M.L. Brown

D. Clowe

H. Dahle

T. Erben

M. Gray

M. Hetterscheidt

H. Hoekstra

P. Hudelot

M. Jarvis

K. Kuijken

V. Margoniner

Y. Mellier

R. Nakajima

A. Refregier

J. Rhodes

T. Schrabback

D. Wittman



Abstract

The Shear Testing Programme (STEP) is a collaborative project to improve the accuracy and reliability of all weak lensing measurements in preparation for the next generation of wide-field surveys. In this first STEP paper, we present the results of a blind analysis of simulated ground-based observations of relatively simple galaxy morphologies. The most successful methods are shown to achieve percent level accuracy. From the cosmic shear pipelines that have been used to constrain cosmology, we find weak lensing shear measured to an accuracy that is within the statistical errors of current weak lensing analyses, with shear measurements accurate to better than 7 per cent. The dominant source of measurement error is shown to arise from calibration uncertainties where the measured shear is over or underestimated by a constant multiplicative factor. This is of concern as calibration errors cannot be detected through standard diagnostic tests. The measured calibration errors appear to result from stellar contamination, false object detection, the shear measurement method itself, selection bias and/or the use of biased weights. Additive systematics (false detections of shear) resulting from residual point-spread function anisotropy are, in most cases, reduced to below an equivalent shear of 0.001, an order of magnitude below cosmic shear distortions on the scales probed by current surveys. Our results provide a snapshot view of the accuracy of current ground-based weak lensing methods and a benchmark upon which we can improve. To this end we provide descriptions of each method tested and include details of the eight different implementations of the commonly used Kaiser, Squires & Broadhurst method (KSB+) to aid the improvement of future KSB+ analyses.

Citation

Heymans, C., Van Waerbeke, L., Bacon, D., Berge, J., Bernstein, G., Bertin, E., …Wittman, D. (2006). The Shear Testing Programme - I. Weak lensing analysis of simulated ground-based observations. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 368(3), 1323-1339. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10198.x

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 21, 2006
Deposit Date Mar 21, 2013
Publicly Available Date Jan 29, 2015
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Print ISSN 0035-8711
Electronic ISSN 1365-2966
Publisher Royal Astronomical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 368
Issue 3
Pages 1323-1339
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10198.x
Keywords Gravitational lensing, Cosmology: observations, Large-scale structure of Universe.

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Copyright Statement
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ©: 2006 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.





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