Correcting the z~8 Galaxy Luminosity Function for Gravitational Lensing Magnification Bias
Charlotte A. Mason, Tommaso Treu, Kasper B. Schmidt, Thomas E., Collett, Michele Trenti, Philip J. Marshall, Robert Barone-Nugent, Larry D., Bradley, Massimo Stiavelli, Stuart Wyithe

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Bayesian method to correct for gravitational lensing effects in high-redshift galaxy luminosity function estimates, showing the bias is small at z~8 but significant for future surveys at higher redshifts.
Contribution
It develops a Bayesian framework to account for magnification bias in high-redshift galaxy luminosity functions, applied to z~8 data, and assesses its impact on future wide-field surveys.
Findings
Luminosity function parameters are consistent with and without magnification correction.
Probability of strongly lensed z~8 sources is 3-15%.
Magnification bias will be significant for future surveys at z>10.
Abstract
We present a Bayesian framework to account for the magnification bias from both strong and weak gravitational lensing in estimates of high-redshift galaxy luminosity functions. We illustrate our method by estimating the UV luminosity function using a sample of 97 Y-band dropouts (Lyman break galaxies) found in the Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) survey and from the literature. We find the luminosity function is well described by a Schechter function with characteristic magnitude of , faint-end slope of , and number density of . These parameters are consistent within the uncertainties with those inferred from the same sample without accounting for the magnification bias, demonstrating that the effect is small for current surveys at ,…
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