Evidence for the accelerated expansion of the Universe from weak lensing tomography with COSMOS
Tim Schrabback, Jan Hartlap, Benjamin Joachimi, Martin Kilbinger,, Patrick Simon, Karim Benabed, Maru\v{s}a Brada\v{c}, Tim Eifler, Thomas, Erben, Christopher D. Fassnacht, F. William High, Stefan Hilbert, Hendrik, Hildebrandt, Henk Hoekstra, Konrad Kuijken, Phil Marshall

TL;DR
This study uses space-based weak lensing tomography from the COSMOS survey to provide independent evidence for the Universe's accelerated expansion and to constrain cosmological parameters.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of space-based weak lensing tomography in constraining cosmology and provides new measurements consistent with the standard model.
Findings
Lensing signal consistent with General Relativity and LCDM
Measured sigma_8 and Omega_m in agreement with WMAP-5
Provided independent evidence for cosmic acceleration
Abstract
We present a tomographic cosmological weak lensing analysis of the HST COSMOS Survey. Applying our lensing-optimized data reduction, principal component interpolation for the ACS PSF, and improved modelling of charge-transfer inefficiency, we measure a lensing signal which is consistent with pure gravitational modes and no significant shape systematics. We carefully estimate the statistical uncertainty from simulated COSMOS-like fields obtained from ray-tracing through the Millennium Simulation. We test our pipeline on simulated space-based data, recalibrate non-linear power spectrum corrections using the ray-tracing, employ photometric redshifts to reduce potential contamination by intrinsic galaxy alignments, and marginalize over systematic uncertainties. We find that the lensing signal scales with redshift as expected from General Relativity for a concordance LCDM cosmology,…
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