Euclid: Galaxy SED reconstruction in the PHZ processing function: impact on the PSF and the role of medium-band filters
Euclid Collaboration: F. Tarsitano (1, 2), C. Schreiber (3), H. Miyatake (4, 5, 6), A. J. Nishizawa (7, 4), W. G. Hartley (2), L. Miller (8), C. Cragg (8, 9), B. Csizi (10), H. Hildebrandt (11), B. Altieri (12), A. Amara (13), S. Andreon (14), N. Auricchio (15)

TL;DR
This paper develops and assesses methods for reconstructing galaxy spectral energy distributions in the Euclid mission, focusing on the impact of medium-band filters and proposing a hybrid approach to meet PSF correction accuracy requirements.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid SED reconstruction method combining physics- and data-driven techniques, tailored for Euclid's specific observational constraints.
Findings
Gaussian processes and template fitting are effective in specific redshift ranges.
A hybrid approach improves overall SED reconstruction accuracy.
Medium-band filters enhance the spectral sampling and reconstruction quality.
Abstract
Weak lensing surveys require accurate correction for the point spread function (PSF) when measuring galaxy shapes. For a diffraction-limited PSF, as arises in space-based missions, this correction depends on each galaxy SED. In the Euclid mission, galaxy SED reconstruction, a tasks of the photometric-redshift processing function (PHZ PF), relies on broad- and medium-band ancillary photometry. The limited wavelength sampling of the Euclid VIS passband and signal-to-noise ratio may affect the reconstruction accuracy and translate into biases in the weak lensing measurements. In this study, we present the methodology, which is employed in the Euclid PHZ PF, for reconstructing galaxy SEDs at 55 wavelengths, sampling the VIS passband every 10 nm, and we assess whether it fulfils the accuracy requirements imposed on the Euclid PSF model. We employ both physics- and data-driven methods,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
