Abstract

Weak gravitational lensing is now established as a powerful method to measure mass fluctuations in the universe. It relies on the measurement of small coherent distortions of the images of background galaxies. Even low-level correlations in the intrinsic shapes of galaxies could however produce a significant spurious lensing signal. These correlations are also interesting in their own right, since their detection would constrain models of galaxy formation. Using haloes found in N-body simulations, we compute the correlation functions of the intrinsic ellipticity of spiral galaxies assuming that the disc is perpendicular to the angular momentum of the dark matter halo. We also consider a simple model for elliptical galaxies, in which the shape of the dark matter halo is assumed to be the same as that of the light. For deep lensing surveys with median redshifts ∼1, we find that intrinsic correlations of ∼10−4 on angular scales are generally below the expected lensing signal, and contribute only a small fraction of the excess signals reported on these scales. On larger scales we find limits to the intrinsic correlation function at a level ∼10−5, which gives a (model-dependent) range of separations for which the intrinsic signal is about an order of magnitude below the ellipticity correlation function expected from weak lensing. Intrinsic correlations are thus negligible on these scales for dedicated weak lensing surveys. For wider but shallower surveys such as SuperCOSMOS, APM and SDSS, we cannot exclude the possibility that intrinsic correlations could dominate the lensing signal. We discuss how such surveys could be used to calibrate the importance of this effect, as well as study spin–spin correlations of spiral galaxies.

Highlights

  • Weak gravitational lensing is established as a powerful method to directly measure the distribution of mass in the universe

  • We model a spiral galaxy as a thin disk which is assumed to be perpendicular to the angular momentum vector

  • The impact of intrinsic correlations on current weak lensing surveys can be established by examining figure 2. They reveal that the upper limit that we derived for the intrinsic correlation are well below the lensing correlation functions for θ >∼ 1′

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Weak gravitational lensing is established as a powerful method to directly measure the distribution of mass in the universe (see Mellier 1999; Kaiser 1999; Bartelmann & Schneider 1999 for recent reviews). These intrinsic shape correlations must be accounted for in weak lensing surveys They are interesting in their own right as their detection would constrain models of galaxy formation. We study the correlation of galaxy shapes, quantify its impact on weak lensing surveys and assess its detectability using wide shallow surveys. This allows us to compute the angular correlation function of the ellipticity of the galaxies projected on the sky We compare this intrinsic ellipticity correlation function to that expected for weak lensing surveys.

ELLIPTICITY CORRELATION FUNCTION
CORRELATIONS FROM WEAK LENSING
Galaxy Models
Simulations
Ellipticity Correlation Functions
IMPACT FOR WEAK LENSING SURVEYS AND DETECTABILITY
CONCLUSIONS
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