Return to search

Optimal weak lensing tomography for CFHTLenS

Weak gravitational lensing is a powerful astronomical tool for constraining cosmological parameters that is entering its prime. Lensing occurs because gravitational fields deflect light rays and measuring this deflection through a statistic known as cosmic shear allows us to directly measure the properties of dark matter and dark energy on large scales. In principle, gravitational lensing is a clean probe of the cosmology of the Universe, as it depends on gravity alone and not on incomplete astrophysical models or approximations. In practice, however, there are several factors that limit the accuracy and precision of lensing measurements. These include accurate measurement of galaxy shapes, correctly accounting for distortions to galaxy images due to the point spread function of the telescope, the presence of intrinsic alignments (IAs) of galaxy shapes due to physical processes, and inaccuracies in commonly-used galaxy photometric redshift information. These effects may all introduce systematic errors in lensing measurements which must be carefully accounted for to ensure that cosmological constraints from lensing are unbiased and as precise as possible. The Canada-France-Hawaii-Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) is the largest weak lensing survey completed to date, covering 154 square degrees of the sky in 5 optical bands, with photometric redshift information for every survey galaxy. With lensing measurements from more galaxies than ever before, the statistical uncertainties on parameter estimates will be the lowest ever achieved from weak lensing. If left unaccounted for, sources of systematic error would dominate over the statistical uncertainty, potentially biasing parameter estimates catastrophically. A technique known as tomography in which galaxies are sorted into bins based on their redshift can help constrain cosmological parameters more precisely. This is because utilising the redshifts of survey galaxies retains cosmological information that would otherwise be lost, such as the behaviour of dark energy and the growth of structure over time. Tomography, however, increases the demand for systematics-free galaxy catalogues as the technique is strongly sensitive to the IA signal and photometric redshift errors. Therefore, future lensing analyses will require a more sophisticated treatment of these effects to extract maximal information from the lensing signal. A thorough understanding of the error on lensing measurements is necessary in order to produce meaningful cosmological constraints. One of the key features of cosmic shear is that it is highly correlated over di erent angular scales, meaning that error estimates must take into account the covariance of the data over different angular scales, and in the case of tomography, between different redshift bins. The behaviour and size of the (inverse) covariance matrix is one of the limiting factors in such a cosmological likelihood analysis, so constructing an accurate, unbiased estimate of the covariance matrix inverse is essential to cosmic shear analysis. This thesis presents work to optimise tomographic weak lensing analysis and achieve the tightest parameter constraints possible for a CFHTLenS-like survey. N-body simulations and Gaussian shear fields incorporating an IA model (known as the `non-linear alignment' model) with a free parameter are used to estimate fully tomographic covariance matrices of cosmic shear for CFHTLenS. We simultaneously incorporate for the first time the error contribution expected from the non-linear alignment model for IAs and realistic photometric redshift uncertainties as measured from the CFHTLenS. We find that non-Gaussian simulations that incorporate nonlinearity on small scales are needed to ensure the covariance is not underestimated, and that the covariance matrix is shot-noise dominated for almost all tomographic correlations. The number of realisations of the simulations used to estimate the covariance places a hard limit on the maximum number of tomographic bins that one can use in an analysis. Given the available number of lines of sight generated from CFHTLenS-like simulations, we find that up to ~ 15 tomographic bins may be utilised in a likelihood analysis. The estimated tomographic covariance matrices are used in a least-squares likelihood analysis in order to find the combination of both angular and tomographic bins that gives the tightest constraints on some key cosmological parameters. We find that the optimum binning is somewhat degenerate, with around 6 tomographic and 8 angular bins being optimal, and limited by the available number of realisations of the simulations used to estimate the covariance. We also investigate the bias on best- t parameter estimates that occurs if IAs or photometric redshift errors are neglected. With our choice of IA model, the effect of neglecting IAs on the best- t cosmological parameters is not significant for a CFHTLenS-like survey, although this may not be true if the IA signal differs substantially from the model, or for future wide-field surveys with much smaller statistical uncertainties. Similarly, neglecting photometric redshift errors does not result in significant bias, although we apply similar caveats. Finally, we apply the results of this optimisation to the CFHTLenS cosmic shear data, performing a preliminary analysis of the shear correlation function to produce both 2D and optimal tomographic cosmological constraints. From 6-bin tomography, we constrain the matter density parameter Ωm = 0:419+0:123-0:090, the amplitude of the matter power spectrum σ8 = 0:623+0:101 -0:084 and the amplitude parameter of the non-linear alignment model, A = -1:161+1:163 -0:597. We perform this analysis to test the validity and limitations of the optimal binning on real data and find that 6-bin tomography improves parameter constraints considerably, albeit not as much as when performed on simulated data. This analysis represents an important step in the development of techniques to optimise the recovery of lensing information and hence cosmological constraints, while simultaneously accounting for potential sources of bias in shear analysis.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:578397
Date January 2012
CreatorsGrocutt, Emma Liana
ContributorsHeymans, Catherine; Heavens, Alan
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/7752

Page generated in 0.0023 seconds