KiDS & Euclid: Cosmological implications of a pseudo angular power spectrum analysis of KiDS-1000 cosmic shear tomography
A. Loureiro, L. Whittaker, A. Spurio Mancini, B. Joachimi, A. Cuceu,, M. Asgari, B. St\"olzner, T. Tr\"oster, A. H. Wright, M. Bilicki, A. Dvornik,, B. Giblin, C. Heymans, H. Hildebrandt, H. Shan, A. Amara, N. Auricchio, C., Bodendorf, D. Bonino, E. Branchini, M. Brescia

TL;DR
This paper presents a tomographic weak lensing analysis of KiDS-1000 data using a new pseudo angular power spectrum estimator, constraining cosmological parameters and confirming existing tensions with CMB results.
Contribution
It introduces a novel pseudo-$C_{}$$ estimator for cosmic shear analysis and applies it to KiDS-1000 data, improving cosmological constraints and systematic checks.
Findings
Measured $S_8$ parameter as 0.754 with uncertainties.
Combined data yields $S_8$ of 0.771, tightening constraints.
Results agree with previous KiDS and SDSS analyses, confirming tension with CMB.
Abstract
We present a tomographic weak lensing analysis of the Kilo Degree Survey Data Release 4 (KiDS-1000), using a new pseudo angular power spectrum estimator (pseudo-) under development for the ESA Euclid mission. Over 21 million galaxies with shape information are divided into five tomographic redshift bins, ranging from 0.1 to 1.2 in photometric redshift. We measured pseudo- using eight bands in the multipole range for auto- and cross-power spectra between the tomographic bins. A series of tests were carried out to check for systematic contamination from a variety of observational sources including stellar number density, variations in survey depth, and point spread function properties. While some marginal correlations with these systematic tracers were observed, there is no evidence of bias in the cosmological inference. B-mode power spectra are…
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