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Radio-Optical Galaxy Shape and Shear Correlations in the COSMOS Field using 3 GHz VLA Observations

We present a weak lensing analysis of the 3 GHz VLA radio survey of the COSMOS field, which we correlate with overlapping HST-ACS optical observations using both intrinsic galaxy shape and cosmic shear correlation statistics. After cross-matching sources between the two catalogues, we measure the co...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:arXiv.org 2019-08
Main Authors: Hillier, Tom, Brown, Michael L, Harrison, Ian, Whittaker, Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We present a weak lensing analysis of the 3 GHz VLA radio survey of the COSMOS field, which we correlate with overlapping HST-ACS optical observations using both intrinsic galaxy shape and cosmic shear correlation statistics. After cross-matching sources between the two catalogues, we measure the correlations of galaxy position angles and find a Pearson correlation coefficient of \(0.14 \pm 0.03\). This is a marked improvement from previous studies which found very weak, or non-existent correlations, and gives insight into the emission processes of radio and optical galaxies. We also extract power spectra of averaged galaxy ellipticities (the primary observable for cosmic shear) from the two catalogues, and produce optical-optical, radio-optical and radio-radio spectra. The optical-optical auto-power spectrum was measured to a detection significance of 9.80\(\sigma\) and is consistent with previous observations of the same field. For radio spectra (which we do not calibrate, given the unknown nature of their systematics), although we do not detect significant radio-optical (1.50\(\sigma\)) or radio-radio (1.45\(\sigma\)) \(E\)-mode power spectra, we do find the \(E\)-mode spectra to be more consistent with the shear signal expected from previous studies than with a null signal, and vice versa for \(B\)-mode and \(EB\) cross-correlation spectra. Our results give promise that future radio weak lensing surveys with larger source number densities over larger areas will have the capability to measure significant weak lensing signals.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1810.01220