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Cosmic shear measurements with Dark Energy Survey Science Verification data

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Title: Cosmic shear measurements with Dark Energy Survey Science Verification data
Authors: Becker, MR
Troxel, MA
MacCrann, N
Krause, E
Eifler, TF
Friedrich, O
Nicola, A
Refregier, A
Amara, A
Bacon, D
Bernstein, GM
Bonnett, C
Bridle, SL
Busha, MT
Chang, C
Dodelson, S
Erickson, B
Evrard, AE
Frieman, J
Gaztanaga, E
Gruen, D
Hartley, W
Jain, B
Jarvis, M
Kacprzak, T
Kirk, D
Kravtsov, A
Leistedt, B
Peiris, HV
Rykoff, ES
Sabiu, C
Sanchez, C
Seo, H
Sheldon, E
Wechsler, RH
Zuntz, J
Abbott, T
Abdalla, FB
Allam, S
Armstrong, R
Banerji, M
Bauer, AH
Benoit-Levy, A
Bertin, E
Brooks, D
Buckley-Geer, E
Burke, DL
Capozzi, D
Carnero Rosell, A
Kind, MC
Carretero, J
Castander, FJ
Crocce, M
Cunha, CE
D'Andrea, CB
Da Costa, LN
DePoy, DL
Desai, S
Diehl, HT
Dietrich, JP
Doel, P
Fausti Neto, A
Fernandez, E
Finley, DA
Flaugher, B
Fosalba, P
Gerdes, DW
Gruendl, RA
Gutierrez, G
Honscheid, K
James, DJ
Kuehn, K
Kuropatkin, N
Lahav, O
Li, TS
Lima, M
Maia, MAG
March, M
Martini, P
Melchior, P
Miller, CJ
Miquel, R
Mohr, JJ
Nichol, RC
Nord, B
Ogando, R
Plazas, AA
Reil, K
Romer, AK
Roodman, A
Sako, M
Sanchez, E
Scarpine, V
Schubnell, M
Sevilla-Noarbe, I
Smith, RC
Soares-Santos, M
Sobreira, F
Suchyta, E
Swanson, MEC
Tarle, G
Thaler, J
Thomas, D
Vikram, V
Walker, AR
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: We present measurements of weak gravitational lensing cosmic shear two-point statistics using Dark Energy Survey Science Verification data. We demonstrate that our results are robust to the choice of shear measurement pipeline, either ngmix or im3shape, and robust to the choice of two-point statistic, including both real and Fourier-space statistics. Our results pass a suite of null tests including tests for B-mode contamination and direct tests for any dependence of the two-point functions on a set of 16 observing conditions and galaxy properties, such as seeing, airmass, galaxy color, galaxy magnitude, etc. We furthermore use a large suite of simulations to compute the covariance matrix of the cosmic shear measurements and assign statistical significance to our null tests. We find that our covariance matrix is consistent with the halo model prediction, indicating that it has the appropriate level of halo sample variance. We compare the same jackknife procedure applied to the data and the simulations in order to search for additional sources of noise not captured by the simulations. We find no statistically significant extra sources of noise in the data. The overall detection significance with tomography for our highest source density catalog is 9.7 σ . Cosmological constraints from the measurements in this work are presented in a companion paper [DES et al., Phys. Rev. D 94, 022001 (2016).].
Issue Date: 6-Jul-2016
Date of Acceptance: 1-Jul-2016
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/80260
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.94.022002
ISSN: 1550-2368
Publisher: American Physical Society
Start Page: 022002 – 1
End Page: 022002 – 24
Journal / Book Title: Physical Review D: Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology
Volume: 94
Issue: 2
Copyright Statement: © 2016 American Physical Society
Keywords: Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Physics, Particles & Fields
Physics
POLARIZATION POWER SPECTRA
GALAXY SHAPE MEASUREMENT
WEAK LENSING SURVEYS
NOISE BIAS
COVARIANCE
IMPACT
STATISTICS
MATTER
MODEL
SIMULATIONS
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Physics, Particles & Fields
Physics
POLARIZATION POWER SPECTRA
GALAXY SHAPE MEASUREMENT
WEAK LENSING SURVEYS
NOISE BIAS
COVARIANCE
IMPACT
STATISTICS
MATTER
MODEL
SIMULATIONS
astro-ph.CO
astro-ph.CO
Publication Status: Published
Article Number: ARTN 022002
Online Publication Date: 2016-07-06
Appears in Collections:Physics
Astrophysics