Gravitational Lensing Analysis of the Kilo Degree Survey
Konrad Kuijken, Catherine Heymans, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Reiko, Nakajima, Thomas Erben, Jelte T.A. de Jong, Massimo Viola, Ami Choi, Henk, Hoekstra, Lance Miller, Edo van Uitert, Alexandra Amon, Chris Blake, Margot, Brouwer, Axel Buddendiek, Ian Fenech Conti, Martin Eriksen

TL;DR
This paper details the data processing, quality assessment, and initial cosmological analysis of the KiDS weak lensing survey, including catalog creation, systematic error testing, and data release for community use.
Contribution
It introduces the KiDS lensing and photometric redshift catalogues, describes the data processing pipeline, and demonstrates their suitability for cosmological studies.
Findings
High-quality shear and redshift catalogues produced
Extensive systematic error tests conducted
Data suitable for cosmological measurements
Abstract
The Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) is a multi-band imaging survey designed for cosmological studies from weak lensing and photometric redshifts. It uses the ESO VLT Survey Telescope with its wide-field camera OmegaCAM. KiDS images are taken in four filters similar to the SDSS ugri bands. The best-seeing time is reserved for deep r-band observations that reach a median 5-sigma limiting AB magnitude of 24.9 with a median seeing that is better than 0.7arcsec. Initial KiDS observations have concentrated on the GAMA regions near the celestial equator, where extensive, highly complete redshift catalogues are available. A total of 109 survey tiles, one square degree each, form the basis of the first set of lensing analyses, which focus on measurements of halo properties of GAMA galaxies. 9 galaxies per square arcminute enter the lensing analysis, for an effective inverse shear variance of 69 per…
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