The importance of magnification effects in galaxy-galaxy lensing
Sandra Unruh, Peter Schneider, Stefan Hilbert, Patrick Simon, Sandra, Martin, Jorge Corella Puertas

TL;DR
Magnification effects significantly bias galaxy-galaxy lensing measurements, especially at high redshifts and steep luminosity functions, necessitating correction for accurate mass profile inference in future surveys.
Contribution
This paper quantifies magnification biases in galaxy-galaxy lensing using simulations and analytical models, providing correction methods for future weak lensing analyses.
Findings
Magnification can bias shear profiles by up to 45%.
Mass estimates can be biased by up to 55%.
Bias depends on the slope of the galaxy luminosity function.
Abstract
Magnification changes the observed number counts of galaxies on the sky. This biases the observed tangential shear profiles around galaxies, the so-called galaxy-galaxy lensing (GGL) signal, and the related excess mass profile. Correspondingly, inference of physical quantities, such as the mean mass profile of halos around galaxies, are affected by magnification effects. We use simulated shear and galaxy data of the Millennium Simulation to quantify the effect on shear and mass estimates from magnified lens and source number counts. The former are due to the large-scale matter distribution in the foreground of the lenses, the latter are caused by magnification of the source population by the matter associated with the lenses. The GGL signal is calculated from the simulations by an efficient fast-Fourier transform that can also be applied to real data. The numerical treatment is…
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