4.6 Article

Cosmic shear statistics and cosmology

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 374, Issue 3, Pages 757-769

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010766

Keywords

cosmology : theory; dark matter; gravitational lensing; large-scale structure of the Universe

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We report a measurement of cosmic shear correlations using an effective area of 6.5 deg(2) of the VIRMOS deep imaging survey in progress at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. We measured various shear correlation functions, the aperture mass statistic and the top-hat smoothed variance of the shear with a detection significance exceeding 12 sigma. We present results on angular scales from 3 arcsec to half a degree. The lensing origin of the signal is confirmed through tests that rely on the scalar nature of the gravitational potential. The different statistical measures give consistent results over the full range of angular scales. These important tests of the measurements demonstrate that the measured correlations could provide accurate constraints on cosmological parameters, subject to the systematic uncertainty in the source redshift distribution. The measurement over more than two decades of scale allows one to evaluate the effect of the shape of the power spectrum on cosmological parameter estimation. The degeneracy on sigma (8) - Omega (o) can be broken if priors on the shape of the linear power spectrum (parameterized by Gamma) are assumed. For instance, with Gamma = 0.21 and at the 95% confidence level, we obtain 0.65 < (8) < 1.2 and 0.22 < Omega (o) < 0.55 for open models, and (8) > 0.7 and Omega (o) < 0.4 for at (-CDM) models. We discuss how these results would scale if the assumed source redshift distribution needed to be modified with forthcoming measurements of photometric redshifts. From the tangential/radial mode decomposition we can set an upper limit on the intrinsic shape alignment, which has recently been suggested as a possible contribution to the lensing signal. Within the error bars, there is no detection of intrinsic shape alignment for scales larger than 1'.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available