Lensing in the Blue. II. Estimating the Sensitivity of Stratospheric Balloons to Weak Gravitational Lensing

Author:

McCleary Jacqueline E.ORCID,Everett Spencer W.ORCID,Shaaban Mohamed M.ORCID,Gill Ajay S.ORCID,Vassilakis Georgios N.ORCID,Huff Eric M.ORCID,Massey Richard J.ORCID,Benton Steven J.ORCID,Brown Anthony M.,Clark Paul,Holder Bradley,Fraisse Aurelien A.,Jauzac MathildeORCID,Jones William C.ORCID,Lagattuta DavidORCID,Leung Jason S.-Y.ORCID,Li LunORCID,T. Luu Thuy Vy,Nagy Johanna M.ORCID,Netterfield C. Barth,Paracha EmaadORCID,Redmond Susan F.ORCID,Rhodes Jason D.ORCID,Schmoll JürgenORCID,Sirks EllenORCID,Tam Sut Ieng

Abstract

Abstract The Superpressure Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope (SuperBIT) is a diffraction-limited, wide-field, 0.5 m, near-infrared to near-ultraviolet observatory designed to exploit the stratosphere’s space-like conditions. SuperBIT’s 2023 science flight will deliver deep, blue imaging of galaxy clusters for gravitational lensing analysis. In preparation, we have developed a weak-lensing measurement pipeline with modern algorithms for PSF characterization, shape measurement, and shear calibration. We validate our pipeline and forecast SuperBIT survey properties with simulated galaxy cluster observations in SuperBIT’s near-UV and blue bandpasses. We predict imaging depth, galaxy number (source) density, and redshift distribution for observations in SuperBIT’s three bluest filters; the effect of lensing sample selections is also considered. We find that, in three hours of on-sky integration, SuperBIT can attain a depth of b = 26 mag and a total source density exceeding 40 galaxies per square arcminute. Even with the application of lensing-analysis catalog selections, we find b-band source densities between 25 and 30 galaxies per square arcminute with a median redshift of z = 1.1. Our analysis confirms SuperBIT’s capability for weak gravitational lensing measurements in the blue.

Funder

NASA ∣ SMD ∣ Astrophysics Division

Durham University

Royal Society

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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