Towards an understanding of third-order galaxy-galaxy lensing
Patrick Simon, Peter Schneider, Daniela K\"ubler

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simplified toy model to better understand third-order galaxy-galaxy lensing, demonstrating how specific correlators can detect deviations from the model and reveal complex matter distributions.
Contribution
It develops an isolated lens model to interpret third-order lensing statistics and shows how certain correlators can identify deviations indicating complex halo structures.
Findings
The lens-lens-shear correlator detects excess matter around galaxy pairs.
The lens-shear-shear correlator is sensitive to halo variations.
The model helps distinguish simple from complex matter distributions.
Abstract
Third-order galaxy-galaxy lensing (G3L) is a next generation galaxy-galaxy lensing technique that either measures the excess shear about lens pairs or the excess shear-shear correlations about lenses. It is clear that these statistics assess the three-point correlations between galaxy positions and projected matter density. For future applications of these novel statistics, we aim at a more intuitive understanding of G3L to isolate the main features that possibly can be measured. We construct a toy model ("isolated lens model"; ILM) for the distribution of galaxies and associated matter to determine the measured quantities of the two G3L correlation functions and traditional galaxy-galaxy lensing (GGL) in a simplified context. The ILM presumes single lens galaxies to be embedded inside arbitrary matter haloes that, however, are statistically independent ("isolated") from any other halo…
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