Euclid preparation: XXVIII. Modelling of the weak lensing angular power spectrum
Euclid Collaboration: A. C. Deshpande, T. Kitching, A. Hall, M. L., Brown, N. Aghanim, L. Amendola, N. Auricchio, M. Baldi, R. Bender, D. Bonino,, E. Branchini, M. Brescia, J. Brinchmann, S. Camera, G. P. Candini, V., Capobianco, C. Carbone, V. F. Cardone, J. Carretero

TL;DR
This paper analyzes higher-order effects in cosmic shear modeling for Euclid, quantifies their impact on cosmological parameters, and identifies which effects must be included to avoid significant biases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive assessment of 24 higher-order effects on cosmic shear spectra and quantifies their biases on key cosmological parameters for Euclid.
Findings
Magnification bias, source-lens clustering, and local Universe effects cause significant parameter biases.
Over all effects, biases in key parameters can reach up to 1.49σ.
Certain effects must be modeled to prevent biases exceeding 0.25σ.
Abstract
This work considers which higher-order effects in modelling the cosmic shear angular power spectra must be taken into account for Euclid. We identify which terms are of concern, and quantify their individual and cumulative impact on cosmological parameter inference from Euclid. We compute the values of these higher-order effects using analytic expressions, and calculate the impact on cosmological parameter estimation using the Fisher matrix formalism. We review 24 effects and find the following potentially need to be accounted for: the reduced shear approximation, magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source obscuration, local Universe effects, and the flat Universe assumption. Upon computing these explicitly, and calculating their cosmological parameter biases, using a maximum multipole of , we find that the magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source…
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