Constraining source redshift distributions with gravitational lensing

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Abstract

We introduce a new method for constraining the redshift distribution of a set of galaxies, using weak gravitational lensing shear. Instead of using observed shears and redshifts to constrain cosmological parameters, we ask how well the shears around clusters can constrain the redshifts, assuming fixed cosmological parameters. This provides a check on photometric redshifts, independent of source spectral energy distribution properties and therefore free of confounding factors such as misidentification of spectral breaks. We find that 40 massive (σv = 1200kms-1) cluster lenses are sufficient to determine the fraction of sources in each of six coarse redshift bins to 11%, given weak (20%) priors on the masses of the highest-redshift lenses, tight (5%) priors on the masses of the lowest-redshift lenses, and only modest (20%-50%) priors on calibration and evolution effects. Additional massive lenses drive down uncertainties as , but the improvement slows as one is forced to use lenses further down the mass function. Future large surveys contain enough clusters to reach 1% precision in the bin fractions if the tight lens-mass priors can be maintained for large samples of lenses. In practice this will be difficult to achieve, but the method may be valuable as a complement to other more precise methods because it is based on different physics and therefore has different systematic errors. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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APA

Wittman, D., & Dawson, W. A. (2012, September 10). Constraining source redshift distributions with gravitational lensing. Astrophysical Journal. Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/756/2/140

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