Impact and mitigation of spectroscopic systematics on DESI DR1 clustering measurements
A. Krolewski, J. Yu, A. J. Ross, S. Penmetsa, W. J. Percival, R. Zhou,, J. Hou, J. Aguilar, S. Ahlen, D. Brooks, E. Chaussidon, T. Claybaugh, A. de, la Macorra, Biprateep Dey, J. E. Forero-Romero, S. Gontcho A Gontcho, J. Guy,, K. Honscheid, S. Juneau, D. Kirkby, T. Kisner

TL;DR
This paper investigates spectroscopic systematics in DESI DR1 galaxy clustering measurements, quantifies their impact, and develops correction methods to ensure unbiased cosmological results.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of spectroscopic systematics in DESI DR1, introduces weights to correct for fluctuations, and assesses their effect on cosmological parameter estimation.
Findings
Redshift success rate fluctuates up to 3% with signal-to-noise.
Weights effectively remove systematic fluctuations.
Corrections alter cosmological parameters by less than 15% of their statistical errors.
Abstract
The large scale structure catalogs within DESI Data Release 1 (DR1) use nearly 6 million galaxies and quasars as tracers of the large-scale structure of the universe to measure the expansion history with baryon acoustic oscillations and the growth of structure with redshift-space distortions. In order to take advantage of DESI's unprecedented statistical power, we must ensure that the galaxy clustering measurements are unaffected by non-cosmological density fluctuations. One source of spurious fluctuations comes from variation in galaxy density with spectroscopic observing conditions, lowering the redshift efficiency (and thus galaxy density) in certain areas of the sky. We measure the uniformity of the redshift success rate for DESI luminous red galaxies (LRG), bright galaxies (BGS) and quasars (QSO), complementing the detailed discussion of emission line galaxy (ELG) systematics in a…
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