Weighing the Giants II: Improved Calibration of Photometry from Stellar Colors and Accurate Photometric Redshifts
Patrick L. Kelly (1), Anja von der Linden (1), Douglas E. Applegate, (1), Mark T. Allen (1), Steven W. Allen (1), Patricia R. Burchat (1), David, L. Burke (1), Harald Ebeling (2), Peter Capak (3), Oliver Czoske (4), David, Donovan (2), Adam Mantz (5)

TL;DR
This paper introduces enhanced calibration techniques for stellar and galaxy photometry using stellar locus modeling and flat-field adjustments, resulting in highly accurate photometric redshifts suitable for cosmological studies.
Contribution
It develops a new method for stellar locus calibration and flat-field correction, significantly improving photometric accuracy and enabling reliable redshift estimation without spectroscopic training.
Findings
Achieved galaxy magnitude calibration accuracy of < 0.02 mag.
Photometric redshifts with sigma ~ 0.03 for z<1.
Validated redshift distributions against multi-band photometry.
Abstract
We present improved methods for using stars found in astronomical exposures to calibrate both star and galaxy colors as well as to adjust the instrument flat field. By developing a spectroscopic model for the SDSS stellar locus in color-color space, synthesizing an expected stellar locus, and simultaneously solving for all unknown zeropoints when fitting to the instrumental locus, we increase the calibration accuracy of stellar locus matching. We also use a new combined technique to estimate improved flat-field models for the Subaru SuprimeCam camera, forming `star flats' based on the magnitudes of stars observed in multiple positions or through comparison with available SDSS magnitudes. These techniques yield galaxy magnitudes with reliable color calibration (< 0.01 - 0.02 mag accuracy) that enable us to estimate photometric redshift probability distributions without spectroscopic…
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