The quest for the dominant stellar population in the giant elliptical NGC 5018
ASTR SOC P 230 (2001) 435-436
The Cuspy LINER Nucleus of the S0/a Galaxy NGC 2681
(2000)
Source-lens clustering effects on the skewness of the lensing convergence
ArXiv astro-ph/0012200 (2000)
Abstract:
The correlation between source galaxies and lensing potentials causes a systematic effect on measurements of cosmic shear statistics, known as the source-lens clustering (SLC) effect. The SLC effect on the skewness of lensing convergence, $S_3$, is examined using a nonlinear semi-analytic approach and is checked against numerical simulations. The semi-analytic calculations have been performed in a wide variety of generic models for the redshift distribution of source galaxies and power-law models for the bias parameter between the galaxy and dark matter distributions. The semi-analytic predictions are tested successfully against numerical simulations. We find the relative amplitude of the SLC effect on $S_3$ to be of the order of five to forty per cent. It depends significantly on the redshift distribution of sources and on the way the bias parameter evolves. We discuss possible measurement strategies to minimize the SLC effects.Source-lens clustering effects on the skewness of the lensing convergence
(2000)
Mass profiles and anisotropies of early-type galaxies
(2000)