Abstract

Context. Future weak lensing surveys, such as the Euclid mission, will attempt to measure the shapes of billions of galaxies in order to derive cosmological information. These surveys will attain very low levels of statistical error, and systematic errors must be extremely well controlled. In particular, the point spread function (PSF) must be estimated using stars in the field, and recovered with high accuracy. Aims. The aims of this paper are twofold. Firstly, we took steps toward a nonparametric method to address the issue of recovering the PSF field, namely that of finding the correct PSF at the position of any galaxy in the field, applicable to Euclid. Our approach relies solely on the data, as opposed to parametric methods that make use of our knowledge of the instrument. Secondly, we studied the impact of imperfect PSF models on the shape measurement of galaxies themselves, and whether common assumptions about this impact hold true in an Euclid scenario. Methods. We extended the recently proposed resolved components analysis approach, which performs super-resolution on a field of under-sampled observations of a spatially varying, image-valued function. We added a spatial interpolation component to the method, making it a true 2-dimensional PSF model. We compared our approach to PSFEx, then quantified the impact of PSF recovery errors on galaxy shape measurements through image simulations. Results. Our approach yields an improvement over PSFEx in terms of the PSF model and on observed galaxy shape errors, though it is at present far from reaching the required Euclid accuracy. We also find that the usual formalism used for the propagation of PSF model errors to weak lensing quantities no longer holds in the case of an Euclid-like PSF. In particular, different shape measurement approaches can react differently to the same PSF modeling errors.

Highlights

  • As light from background galaxies travels through the universe, it gets deflected due to variations of the gravitational potential

  • For the former, both models tend to overestimate the size of the point spread function (PSF), likely because the super-resolution is performed on a small sample of very narrow objects

  • Beyond the need to use more stars simultaneously to build the model, which emerges from every other current shortcoming of our approach, this strong bias will already be greatly reduced in a more realistic Euclid scenario, since a broadband PSF is necessarily broader than the monochromatic PSF we consider in this work, regardless of the target object’s spectral energy distribution (SED)

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Summary

Introduction

As light from background galaxies travels through the universe, it gets deflected due to variations of the gravitational potential. By observing a great number of sources, one can retrieve the lensing signal, probe the large-scale structure of the Universe and derive information about the matter distribution. This makes weak lensing a very interesting cosmological probe (see e.g., Kilbinger 2015). Several ground-based surveys are currently ongoing as well, and have already led to tighter cosmological constraints. These include the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS, Kuijken et al 2015), the Dark Energy Survey (DES, Jarvis et al 2016), and the HyperSuprime Cam (HSC, Mandelbaum et al 2017). Stage IV surveys will allow the cosmological information extracted from the weak lensing signal to achieve unprecedented accuracies, and include both ground-based observations

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