TY - JOUR
T1 - Measurement of a Cosmographic Distance Ratio with Galaxy and Cosmic Microwave Background Lensing
AU - Miyatake, Hironao
AU - Madhavacheril, Mathew S.
AU - Sehgal, Neelima
AU - Slosar, Anže
AU - Spergel, David N.
AU - Sherwin, Blake
AU - Van Engelen, Alexander
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Physical Society.
PY - 2017/4/17
Y1 - 2017/4/17
N2 - We measure the gravitational lensing shear signal around dark matter halos hosting constant mass galaxies using light sources at z∼1 (background galaxies) and at the surface of last scattering at z∼1100 (the cosmic microwave background). The galaxy shear measurement uses data from the CFHTLenS survey, and the microwave background shear measurement uses data from the Planck satellite. The ratio of shears from these cross-correlations provides a purely geometric distance measurement across the longest possible cosmological lever arm. This is because the matter distribution around the halos, including uncertainties in galaxy bias and systematic errors such as miscentering, cancels in the ratio for halos in thin redshift slices. We measure this distance ratio in three different redshift slices of the constant mass (CMASS) sample and combine them to obtain a 17% measurement of the distance ratio, r=0.390-0.062+0.070, at an effective redshift of z=0.53. This is consistent with the predicted ratio from the Planck best-fit cold dark matter model with a cosmological constant cosmology of r=0.419.
AB - We measure the gravitational lensing shear signal around dark matter halos hosting constant mass galaxies using light sources at z∼1 (background galaxies) and at the surface of last scattering at z∼1100 (the cosmic microwave background). The galaxy shear measurement uses data from the CFHTLenS survey, and the microwave background shear measurement uses data from the Planck satellite. The ratio of shears from these cross-correlations provides a purely geometric distance measurement across the longest possible cosmological lever arm. This is because the matter distribution around the halos, including uncertainties in galaxy bias and systematic errors such as miscentering, cancels in the ratio for halos in thin redshift slices. We measure this distance ratio in three different redshift slices of the constant mass (CMASS) sample and combine them to obtain a 17% measurement of the distance ratio, r=0.390-0.062+0.070, at an effective redshift of z=0.53. This is consistent with the predicted ratio from the Planck best-fit cold dark matter model with a cosmological constant cosmology of r=0.419.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.161301
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.161301
M3 - Article
C2 - 28474927
AN - SCOPUS:85018511447
SN - 0031-9007
VL - 118
JO - Physical Review Letters
JF - Physical Review Letters
IS - 16
M1 - 161301
ER -