Image Analysis for Cosmology: Results from the GREAT10 Galaxy Challenge
T. D. Kitching, S. T. Balan, S. Bridle, N. Cantale, F. Courbin, T., Eifler, M. Gentile, M. S. S. Gill, S. Harmeling, C. Heymans, M. Hirsch, K., Honscheid, T. Kacprzak, D. Kirkby, D. Margala, R. J. Massey, P. Melchior, G., Nurbaeva, K. Patton, J. Rhodes, B. T. P. Rowe

TL;DR
This paper reports on the GREAT10 Galaxy Challenge, a comprehensive evaluation of weak lensing shape measurement methods using realistic variable fields, showing significant accuracy improvements and identifying key factors affecting performance.
Contribution
It introduces a new challenge with variable shear and PSF fields, providing a benchmark for current shape measurement methods and analyzing the impact of various systematics on cosmic shear analysis.
Findings
95 submissions with a threefold accuracy improvement
Best methods achieve sub-percent biases
Accuracy depends strongly on signal-to-noise ratio
Abstract
In this paper we present results from the weak lensing shape measurement GRavitational lEnsing Accuracy Testing 2010 (GREAT10) Galaxy Challenge. This marks an order of magnitude step change in the level of scrutiny employed in weak lensing shape measurement analysis. We provide descriptions of each method tested and include 10 evaluation metrics over 24 simulation branches. GREAT10 was the first shape measurement challenge to include variable fields; both the shear field and the Point Spread Function (PSF) vary across the images in a realistic manner. The variable fields enable a variety of metrics that are inaccessible to constant shear simulations including a direct measure of the impact of shape measurement inaccuracies, and the impact of PSF size and ellipticity, on the shear power spectrum. To assess the impact of shape measurement bias for cosmic shear we present a general…
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