Modeling intrinsic galaxy alignment in the MICE simulation
/ Authors
K. Hoffmann, L. Secco, J. Blazek, M. Crocce, P. Tallada-Cresp'i, S. Samuroff, J. Prat, J. Carretero, P. Fosalba, E. Gaztañaga
and 1 more author
/ Abstract
The intrinsic alignment (IA) of galaxies is potentially a major limitation in deriving cosmological constraints from weak lensing surveys. In order to investigate this effect we assign intrinsic shapes and orientations to galaxies in the light-cone output of the MICE simulation, spanning ∼ 5000deg 2 and reaching redshift 𝑧 = 1 . 4. This assignment is based on a ’semi-analytic’ IA model that uses photometric properties of galaxies as well as the spin and shape of their host halos. Advancing on previous work, we include more realistic distributions of galaxyshapesandaluminositydependentgalaxy-haloalignment. TheIAmodelparametersarecalibratedagainst COSMOS and BOSS LOWZ observations. The null detection of IA in observations of blue galaxies is accounted for by setting random orientations for these objects. We compare the two-point alignment statistics measured in the simulation against predictions from the analytical IA models NLA and TATT over a wide range of scales, redshifts and luminosities for red and blue galaxies separately. We find that both models fit the measurements well at scales above 8 ℎ − 1 Mpc, while TATT outperforms NLA at smaller scales. The IA parameters derived from our fits are in broad agreement with various observational constraints from red galaxies. Lastly, we build a realistic source sample, mimicking DES Year 3 observations and use it to predict the IA contamination to the observed shear statistics. We find this prediction to be within the measurement uncertainty, which might be a consequence of the random alignment of blue galaxies in the simulation.
Journal: Physical Review D