PSF calibration requirements for dark energy from cosmic shear
S. Paulin-Henriksson, A. Amara, L. Voigt, A. Refregier, S.L. Bridle

TL;DR
This paper investigates the fundamental limits on shear measurement accuracy in cosmic shear studies caused by PSF calibration, emphasizing the minimum number of stars needed for reliable PSF modeling to control systematic errors.
Contribution
It derives analytical and simulation-based results linking PSF calibration star count to shear measurement precision, highlighting requirements for current and future surveys.
Findings
Current surveys need calibration over a few stars.
Future surveys require calibration over about 50 stars.
Pixel size impacts the number of stars needed for accurate PSF modeling.
Abstract
The control of systematic effects when measuring galaxy shapes is one of the main challenges for cosmic shear analyses. In this context, we study the fundamental limitations on shear accuracy due to the measurement of the Point Spread Function (PSF) from the finite number of stars. In order to do that, we translate the accuracy required for cosmological parameter estimation to the minimum number of stars over which the PSF must be calibrated. We first derive our results analytically in the case of infinitely small pixels (i.e. infinitely high resolution). Then image simulations are used to validate these results and investigate the effect of finite pixel size in the case of an elliptical gaussian PSF. Our results are expressed in terms of the minimum number of stars required to calibrate the PSF in order to ensure that systematic errors are smaller than statistical errors when…
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