4.7 Article

Weak lensing shear calibration with simulations of the HSC survey

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 481, Issue 3, Pages 3170-3195

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/sty2420

Keywords

gravitational lensing: weak; methods: data analysis; methods: numerical; techniques: image processing

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy Early Career Award Program
  2. University of California Riverside Office of Research and Economic Development through the FIELDS NASA-MIRO program
  3. Japanese Cabinet Office
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)
  5. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
  6. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)
  7. Toray Science Foundation
  8. NAOJ
  9. Kavli IPMU
  10. KEK
  11. ASIAA
  12. Princeton University
  13. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX08AR22G]
  14. National Science Foundation [AST-1238877]

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We present results from a set of simulations designed to constrain the weak lensing shear calibration for the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey. These simulations include HSC observing conditions and galaxy images from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), with fully realistic galaxy morphologies and the impact of nearby galaxies included. We find that the inclusion of nearby galaxies in the images is critical to reproducing the observed distributions of galaxy sizes and magnitudes, due to the non-negligible fraction of unrecognized blends in ground-based data, even with the excellent typical seeing of the HSC survey (0.58 arcsec in the i band). Using these simulations, we detect and remove the impact of selection biases due to the correlation of weights and the quantities used to define the sample (S/N and apparent size) with the lensing shear. We quantify and remove galaxy property-dependent multiplicative and additive shear biases that are intrinsic to our shear estimation method, including an similar to 10 per cent-level multiplicative bias due to the impact of nearby galaxies and unrecognized blends. Finally, we check the sensitivity of our shear calibration estimates to other cuts made on the simulated samples, and find that the changes in shear calibration are well within the requirements for HSC weak lensing analysis. Overall, the simulations suggest that the weak lensing multiplicative biases in the first-year HSC shear catalogue are controlled at the 1 per cent level.

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