Euclid: Photometric redshift calibration with the clustering redshifts technique
W. d'Assignies (1), M. Manera (2, 1), C. Padilla (1), O. Ilbert (3), H. Hildebrandt (4), L. Reynolds (1, 5), J. Chaves-Montero (1), A. H. Wright (4), P. Tallada-Cresp\'i (6, 7), M. Eriksen (1, 7), J. Carretero (6, 7), W. Roster (8), Y. Kang (9), K. Naidoo (10), R. Miquel (1, 11)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that clustering redshifts can accurately calibrate Euclid's galaxy redshift distributions, achieving the precision needed for cosmological constraints by optimizing methods and understanding bias sources.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new clustering redshifts method with improved galaxy bias measurement, successfully meeting Euclid's redshift precision requirements.
Findings
Successfully constrained redshift means and widths for all bins
Achieved precision beyond Euclid's target uncertainty
Identified main bias sources affecting the technique
Abstract
Aims: The precision of cosmological constraints from imaging surveys hinges on accurately estimating the redshift distribution of tomographic bins, especially their mean redshifts. We assess the effectiveness of the clustering redshifts technique in constraining Euclid tomographic redshift bins to meet the target uncertainty of . In this work, these mean redshifts are inferred from the small-scale angular clustering of Euclid galaxies, which are distributed into bins with spectroscopic samples localised in narrow redshift slices. Methods: We generate spectroscopic mocks from the Flagship2 simulation for the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), and Euclid's Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP) spectroscopic survey. We evaluate and optimise the clustering…
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