研究目的
Investigating the performance of a new weak lensing shear measurement algorithm, shear nulling after PSF Gaussianisation (SNAPG), designed to avoid the noise biases that affect most other methods.
研究成果
SNAPG can retrieve shears to percent level accuracy for galaxies with low S/N, even if they are smaller in size than the PSF. The main issue limiting this technique is the correlation between the noisy estimate of the centroid and the pixel noise, which may be mitigated by incorporating further data about the sources.
研究不足
The method's performance is limited by the accuracy of the PSF Gaussianisation routine and the correlation between centroid errors and pixel noise, especially for low S/N galaxies.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The SNAPG method operates on images convolved with a kernel that renders the PSF a circular Gaussian, using weighted second moments of the sources. The response of these moments to a shear of the pre-seeing galaxy image is predicted analytically to construct a shear nulling scheme.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Simulated images of galaxies with known applied shear are used, including well-resolved and barely-resolved galaxies, to test the method's performance.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
GalSim software is used to create simulated galaxy images with perfect circular Gaussian PSFs.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
The method is tested on images with varying signal-to-noise ratios (S/N) and galaxy sizes relative to the PSF. The centroid bias correction is applied to mitigate noise bias.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
The performance of SNAPG is measured by performing a linear fit to the functional form gi,out = (1 + mi) gi,true + ci for each shear component.
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