English

Testing Weak Lensing Maps With Redshift Surveys: A Subaru Field

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2015-05-27 v2 Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics

Abstract

We use a dense redshift survey in the foreground of the Subaru GTO2deg^2 weak lensing field (centered at α2000\alpha_{2000} = 16h04m44s^h04^m44^s;δ2000\delta_{2000} =43^\circ11^{\prime}24^{\prime\prime}$) to assess the completeness and comment on the purity of massive halo identification in the weak lensing map. The redshift survey (published here) includes 4541 galaxies; 4405 are new redshifts measured with the Hectospec on the MMT. Among the weak lensing peaks with a signal-to-noise greater that 4.25, 2/3 correspond to individual massive systems; this result is essentially identical to the Geller et al. (2010) test of the Deep Lens Survey field F2. The Subaru map, based on images in substantially better seeing than the DLS, enables detection of less massive halos at fixed redshift as expected. We demonstrate that the procedure adopted by Miyazaki et al. (2007) for removing some contaminated peaks from the weak lensing map improves agreement between the lensing map and the redshift survey in the identification of candidate massive systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1102.5743,
  title  = {Testing Weak Lensing Maps With Redshift Surveys: A Subaru Field},
  author = {Michael J. Kurtz and Margaret J. Geller and Yousuke Utsumi and Satoshi Miyazaki and Ian P. Dell'Antonio and Daniel G. Fabricant},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1102.5743},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Astrophysical Journal accepted version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T17:33:05.229Z