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Published November 1, 2015 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Mapping the Galaxy Color-Redshift Relation: Optimal Photometric Redshift Calibration Strategies for Cosmology Surveys

Abstract

Calibrating the photometric redshifts of ≳ 10^9 galaxies for upcoming weak lensing cosmology experiments is a major challenge for the astrophysics community. The path to obtaining the required spectroscopic redshifts for training and calibration is daunting, given the anticipated depths of the surveys and the difficulty in obtaining secure redshifts for some faint galaxy populations. Here we present an analysis of the problem based on the self-organizing map, a method of mapping the distribution of data in a high-dimensional space and projecting it onto a lower-dimensional representation. We apply this method to existing photometric data from the COSMOS survey selected to approximate the anticipated Euclid weak lensing sample, enabling us to robustly map the empirical distribution of galaxies in the multidimensional color space defined by the expected Euclid filters. Mapping this multicolor distribution lets us determine where—in galaxy color space—redshifts from current spectroscopic surveys exist and where they are systematically missing. Crucially, the method lets us determine whether a spectroscopic training sample is representative of the full photometric space occupied by the galaxies in a survey. We explore optimal sampling techniques and estimate the additional spectroscopy needed to map out the color–redshift relation, finding that sampling the galaxy distribution in color space in a systematic way can efficiently meet the calibration requirements. While the analysis presented here focuses on the Euclid survey, similar analysis can be applied to other surveys facing the same calibration challenge, such as DES, LSST, and WFIRST.

Additional Information

© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2015 June 19; accepted 2015 September 9; published 2015 October 28. We thank the anonymous referee for constructive comments that significantly improved this work. We thank Dr. Ranga Ram Chary, Dr. Ciro Donalek, and Dr. Mattias Carrasco-Kind for useful discussions. D.M., P.C., D.S., and J.R., acknowledge support by NASA ROSES grant 12-EUCLID12-0004. J.R. is supported by JPL, run by Caltech for NASA. H.Ho. is supported by the DFG Emmy Noether grant Hi 1495/2-1.S.S. was supported by Department of Energy grant DESC0009999. Data from the VUDS survey are based on data obtained with the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope, Paranal, Chile, under Large Program 185.A-0791. This work is based in part on data products made available at the CESAM data center, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille.

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Published - Masters,D_53.pdf

Submitted - 1509.03318v1.pdf

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 25, 2023