CosmoPostProcess delivers simulation-calibrated radial corrections for projection-induced selection bias (20-40% amplitude near 1 h^{-1} Mpc) and baryonic effects in Euclid richness-selected cluster weak lensing profiles.
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UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
Convolutional neural networks can infer galaxy cluster virial masses and scale radii from 2D projected position and line-of-sight velocity distributions with nearly unbiased results and reduced scatter when richness is added or training is limited to relaxed systems.
A masked and initialized variant of Kaiser-Squires weak lensing inversion recovers cluster mass maps with residuals below 0.02 sigma in unmasked nonlinear regions on simulated data without shape noise.
Optical follow-up of 32 Planck SZ candidates yields photometric redshifts and richness estimates confirming 18 (7) as at least half as rich as expected at z>0.5 (z>0.8), highlighting Eddington bias and projection effects.
citing papers explorer
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Euclid preparation. CosmoPostProcess: A simulation calibrated framework for weak lensing selection bias in richness-selected galaxy clusters
CosmoPostProcess delivers simulation-calibrated radial corrections for projection-induced selection bias (20-40% amplitude near 1 h^{-1} Mpc) and baryonic effects in Euclid richness-selected cluster weak lensing profiles.
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Inferring Halo Mass and Scale Radius of Galaxy Clusters Using Convolutional Neural Networks and Uchuu-UniverseMachine Catalogs
Convolutional neural networks can infer galaxy cluster virial masses and scale radii from 2D projected position and line-of-sight velocity distributions with nearly unbiased results and reduced scatter when richness is added or training is limited to relaxed systems.
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Nonlinear Weak Lensing reconstruction for Galaxy Clusters
A masked and initialized variant of Kaiser-Squires weak lensing inversion recovers cluster mass maps with residuals below 0.02 sigma in unmasked nonlinear regions on simulated data without shape noise.
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Optical follow-up study of 32 high-redshift galaxy cluster candidates from Planck with the William Herschel Telescope
Optical follow-up of 32 Planck SZ candidates yields photometric redshifts and richness estimates confirming 18 (7) as at least half as rich as expected at z>0.5 (z>0.8), highlighting Eddington bias and projection effects.