Intrinsic alignments of galaxies and their effects on weak lensing detections of mass concentrations
Z.H. Fan

TL;DR
This study examines how intrinsic galaxy alignments impact weak lensing detections of mass concentrations, revealing that ignoring these alignments can significantly increase false positives and reduce detection efficiency.
Contribution
It quantifies the effect of intrinsic galaxy alignments on weak lensing false peak counts and highlights the importance of accounting for these alignments in observational analyses.
Findings
False peak counts nearly double at .5 threshold due to alignments.
False peak counts triple at threshold when including alignments.
Intrinsic alignments significantly degrade weak lensing detection efficiency.
Abstract
In this paper we investigate the influence of the intrinsic alignment of background galaxies on weak lensing detections of mass concentrations. Specifically, we analyze the number counts of false peaks resulting from intrinsic ellipticities in lensing convergence maps. Including the alignment of source galaxies, the full noise variance from intrinsic ellipticites in convergence -maps can be written as , where is the noise contributed from randomly oriented source galaxies and denotes the additional noise from intrinsic alignments. However, it is observationally difficult to measure and usually only can be estimated in weak lensing observations. Thus the observational signal-to-noise ratio is often defined with respect to , which is denoted as…
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