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Title: Atmospheric Dispersion Effects in Weak Lensing Measurements

Journal Article · · Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/668294· OSTI ID:1203607
 [1];  [1]
  1. Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (United States)

The wavelength dependence of atmospheric refraction causes elongation of finite-bandwidth images along the elevation vector, which produces spurious signals in weak gravitational lensing shear measurements unless this atmospheric dispersion is calibrated and removed to high precision. Because astrometric solutions and PSF characteristics are typically calibrated from stellar images, differences between the reference stars' spectra and the galaxies' spectra will leave residual errors in both the astrometric positions (dr) and in the second moment (width) of the wavelength-averaged PSF (dv) for galaxies.We estimate the level of dv that will induce spurious weak lensing signals in PSF-corrected galaxy shapes that exceed the statistical errors of the DES and the LSST cosmic-shear experiments. We also estimate the dr signals that will produce unacceptable spurious distortions after stacking of exposures taken at different airmasses and hour angles. We also calculate the errors in the griz bands, and find that dispersion systematics, uncorrected, are up to 6 and 2 times larger in g and r bands,respectively, than the requirements for the DES error budget, but can be safely ignored in i and z bands. For the LSST requirements, the factors are about 30, 10, and 3 in g, r, and i bands,respectively. We find that a simple correction linear in galaxy color is accurate enough to reduce dispersion shear systematics to insignificant levels in the r band for DES and i band for LSST,but still as much as 5 times than the requirements for LSST r-band observations. More complex corrections will likely be able to reduce the systematic cosmic-shear errors below statistical errors for LSST r band. But g-band effects remain large enough that it seems likely that induced systematics will dominate the statistical errors of both surveys, and cosmic-shear measurements should rely on the redder bands.

Research Organization:
Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), High Energy Physics (HEP)
Grant/Contract Number:
FG02-95ER40893
OSTI ID:
1203607
Journal Information:
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol. 124, Issue 920; ISSN 0004-6280
Publisher:
Astronomical Society of the PacificCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 14 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (15)

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Cited By (8)

On-Sky Measurements of the Transverse Electric Fields’ Effects in the Dark Energy Camera CCDs journal July 2014
Cosmology with cosmic shear observations: a review journal July 2015
Astrometric Calibration and Performance of the Dark Energy Camera journal May 2017
Phenotypic redshifts with self-organizing maps: A novel method to characterize redshift distributions of source galaxies for weak lensing journal August 2019
On-sky measurements of the transverse electric fields' effects in the Dark Energy Camera CCDs text January 2014
Astrometric calibration and performance of the Dark Energy Camera text January 2017
Phenotypic redshifts with self-organizing maps: A novel method to characterize redshift distributions of source galaxies for weak lensing text January 2019
Impact of chromatic effects on galaxy shape measurements text January 2014

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