Constraining the masses of high-redshift clusters with weak lensing: Revised shape calibration testing for the impact of stronger shears and increased blending
B. Hernandez-Martin, T. Schrabback, H. Hoekstra, N. Martinet, J., Hlavacek-Larrondo, L. E. Bleem, M. D. Gladders, B. Stalder, A. A. Stark, M., Bayliss

TL;DR
This paper improves weak lensing shear calibration for high-redshift galaxy clusters by testing the impact of stronger shears and blending, leading to more accurate mass estimates for these distant clusters.
Contribution
It introduces a revised shear bias correction method accounting for non-weak shear and blending effects, validated through simulations matching real observations.
Findings
Calibration accuracy of ~0.015 achieved, sufficient for current studies.
Blending effects negligible for z>0.7 clusters, minor at lower redshifts.
Refined mass constraints by a factor of 1.38 using improved shear calibration.
Abstract
WL measurements have well-known shear estimation biases, which can be partially corrected for with the use of image simulations. We present an analysis of simulated images that mimic HST/ACS observations of high-redshift galaxy clusters, including cluster specific issues such as non-weak shear and increased blending. Our synthetic galaxies have been generated to match the observed properties of the background-selected samples in the real images. First, we used simulations with galaxies on a grid to determine a revised signal-to-noise-dependent correction for multiplicative shear measurement bias, and to quantify the sensitivity of our bias calibration to mismatches of galaxy or PSF properties between the real data and the simulations. We studied the impact of increased blending and light contamination from cluster and foreground galaxies, finding it negligible for clusters,…
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