Intrinsic galaxy alignments and weak gravitational lensing
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Accepted version
Author(s)
Heavens, AF
Type
Conference Paper
Abstract
Gravitational lensing causes background galaxy images to become aligned, and the statistical characteristics of the image alignments can then be used to constrain the power spectrum of mass fluctuations. Analyses of gravitational lensing assume that intrinsic galaxy alignments are negligible, but if this assumption does not hold, then the interpretation of image alignments will be in error. As gravitational lensing experiments become more ambitious and seek to measure very low-level alignments arising from lensing by large-scale structure, it becomes more important to estimate the level of intrinsic alignment in the galaxy population. In this article, I review the cluster of independent theoretical studies of this issue, as well as the current observational status. Theoretically, the calculation of intrinsic alignments is by no means straightforward, but some consensus has emerged from the existing works, despite each making very different assumptions. This consensus is that a) intrinsic alignments are a small but non-negligible (≲ 10%) contaminant of the lensing ellipticity correlation function, for samples with a median redshift ; b) intrinsic alignments dominate the signal for low-redshift samples , as expected in the SuperCOSMOS lensing survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
Date Issued
2002-03-01
Date Acceptance
2001-05-01
Citation
The Shapes of Galaxies and Their Dark Halos, 2002, pp.21-28
Publisher
World Scientific
Start Page
21
End Page
28
Journal / Book Title
The Shapes of Galaxies and Their Dark Halos
Copyright Statement
© The Author.
Identifier
http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812778017_0004
Source
Proceedings of the Yale Cosmology Workshop
Publication Status
Published
Start Date
2001-05-28
Finish Date
2001-05-30
Coverage Spatial
New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Date Publish Online
2002-11-21