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Published March 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

The impact of high spatial frequency atmospheric distortions on weak-lensing measurements

Abstract

High-precision cosmology with weak gravitational lensing requires a precise measure of the point spread function across the imaging data where the accuracy to which high spatial frequency variation can be modelled is limited by the stellar number density across the field. We analyse dense stellar fields imaged at the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope to quantify the degree of high spatial frequency variation in ground-based imaging point spread functions and compare our results to models of atmospheric turbulence. The data show an anisotropic turbulence pattern with an orientation independent of the wind direction and wind speed. We find the amplitude of the high spatial frequencies to decrease with increasing exposure time as t^(−1/2), and find a negligibly small atmospheric contribution to the point spread function ellipticity variation for exposure times t > 180 s. For future surveys analysing shorter exposure data, this anisotropic turbulence will need to be taken into account as the amplitude of the correlated atmospheric distortions becomes comparable to a cosmological lensing signal on scales less than ∼10 arcmin. This effect could be mitigated, however, by correlating galaxy shear measured on exposures imaged with a time separation greater than 50 s, for which we find the spatial turbulence patterns to be uncorrelated.

Additional Information

© 2012 The Authors. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2012 RAS. Accepted 2011 December 1. Received 2011 November 18; in original form 2011 September 9. Article first published online: 9 Feb 2012. We thank Chihway Chang, Phil Marshall and the rest of the CFHTLenS collaboration for convincing us to write this analysis into a paper and for many useful discussions along the way. We also thank the anonymous referee for helpful comments and the CFHT QSO team and PIs of the various data sets used in this analysis; Jerome Bouvier, Catherine Dougados, Eugene Magnier, Alan McConnachie and John Johnson. CH and BR acknowledge support from the European Research Council under the EC FP7 grant numbers 240185 (CH) and 240672 (BR). HH acknowledges support from Marie Curie IRG grant 230924 and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research grant number 639.042.814. TE is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through project ER 327/3-1 and the Transregional Collaborative Research Centre TR 33 – 'The Dark Universe'. TK was supported by a RAS 2010 Fellowship. This study uses data from the CFHT Science Data Archive hosted and supported by the Canada Astronomy Data Centre operated by the National Research Council of Canada with the support of the Canadian Space Agency. All authors assisted with the development and writing of this paper. CH and BR co-led the statistical analysis, HH conceived the project and led the data mining, catalogue production and data analysis, LM motivated the project and led the visualization of the effect.

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August 22, 2023
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