On the complementarity of galaxy clustering with cosmic shear and flux magnification
Christopher Duncan, Benjamin Joachimi, Alan Heavens, Catherine, Heymans, Hendrik Hildebrandt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that combining galaxy clustering, cosmic shear, and flux magnification enhances cosmological parameter constraints, while neglecting magnification can lead to significant biases.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of galaxy clustering with flux magnification, showing its complementarity with cosmic shear and the impact of neglecting magnification.
Findings
Combining clustering with shear improves the figure of merit by up to 1.52.
Adding galaxy-galaxy lensing increases the figure of merit by up to 3.7.
Neglecting flux magnification biases cosmological parameter estimates.
Abstract
In this paper, we motivate the use of galaxy clustering measurements using photometric redshift information, including a contribution from flux magnification, as a probe of cosmology. We present cosmological forecasts when clustering data alone is used, and when clustering is combined with a cosmic shear analysis. We consider two types of clustering analysis: firstly, clustering with only redshift auto-correlations in tomographic redshift bins; secondly, using all available redshift bin correlations. Finally, we consider how inferred cosmological parameters may be biased using each analysis when flux magnification is neglected. Results are presented for a Stage III ground-based survey, and a Stage IV space-based survey modelled with photometric redshift errors, and values for the slope of the luminosity function inferred from CFHTLenS catalogues. We find that combining clustering…
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