pith. sign in

arxiv: 1907.04459 · v1 · pith:QV7I7V4Knew · submitted 2019-07-09 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO · astro-ph.GA

Shear measurement bias due to spatially varying spectral energy distributions in galaxies

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 23:49 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO astro-ph.GA
keywords color gradientsshear biasweak lensingLSSTchromatic PSFmultiplicative biasgalaxy profilesAEGIS
0
0 comments X

The pith

Galaxy color gradients produce multiplicative shear biases at least a factor of two below LSST requirements.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

Galaxy color gradients mean that spectral energy distributions vary across a galaxy's spatial profile. When combined with a point spread function whose size depends on wavelength, this mismatch biases the galaxy shape measurements needed for weak lensing. The paper calculates the size of the resulting multiplicative bias using both simple parametric bulge-plus-disk models and more realistic profiles built from HST V- and I-band images of AEGIS galaxies. For the parametric cases and for the higher-signal-to-noise AEGIS galaxies where the effect can be isolated, the bias lies at least a factor of two below the LSST full-depth allocation for redshift-dependent shear calibration error. This result indicates that color-gradient bias need not consume a large fraction of the systematic budget for LSST cosmic shear analyses.

Core claim

The bias on cosmic shear measurements from color gradients is computed both for parametric bulge+disk galaxy simulations and for more realistic chromatic galaxy surface brightness profiles based on HST V- and I-band images in the AEGIS survey. For the parametric galaxies, and for the more realistic galaxies derived from AEGIS galaxies with sufficient SNR that color gradient bias can be isolated, the predicted multiplicative shear biases due to color gradients are found to be at least a factor of 2 below the LSST full-depth requirement on the total systematic uncertainty in the redshift-dependent shear calibration.

What carries the argument

Wavelength-dependent PSF applied to galaxies whose surface brightness profiles change with wavelength across their spatial extent, producing a mismatch that biases measured ellipticities.

If this is right

  • Color gradient bias remains subdominant to other contributions in the LSST shear calibration error budget.
  • Parametric bulge+disk models give bias estimates consistent with those from HST-derived realistic profiles for galaxies bright enough to isolate the effect.
  • The bias can be separated from other shear systematics only for galaxies above a minimum signal-to-noise threshold.
  • The publicly released analysis code and data products enable direct checks with alternate galaxy models or PSF prescriptions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the bias level holds, LSST weak lensing teams can direct calibration effort toward other systematics such as PSF modeling residuals or intrinsic alignments.
  • Extending the test to the faintest galaxies that dominate the LSST sample would require statistical stacking methods because individual objects lack the SNR needed to isolate the color gradient contribution.
  • Independent validation of the wavelength dependence assumed in the PSF model would provide the strongest external check on the result.

Load-bearing premise

The AEGIS galaxies with sufficient signal-to-noise to isolate color gradient bias are representative of the faint galaxy population that will dominate LSST weak lensing samples, and the adopted chromatic PSF model accurately represents the wavelength dependence expected for LSST observations.

What would settle it

Direct comparison, in LSST-like imaging, of shear measurements made with a wavelength-dependent PSF model versus a single-wavelength model on the same set of galaxies whose color gradients have been independently measured would show whether the predicted small bias level is realized.

read the original abstract

Galaxy color gradients - i.e., spectral energy distributions that vary across the galaxy profile - will impact galaxy shape measurements when the modeled point spread function (PSF) corresponds to that for a galaxy with spatially uniform color. This paper describes the techniques and results of a study of the expected impact of galaxy color gradients on weak lensing measurements with the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) when the PSF size depends on wavelength. The bias on cosmic shear measurements from color gradients is computed both for parametric bulge+disk galaxy simulations and for more realistic chromatic galaxy surface brightness profiles based on HST V- and I-band images in the AEGIS survey. For the parametric galaxies, and for the more realistic galaxies derived from AEGIS galaxies with sufficient SNR that color gradient bias can be isolated, the predicted multiplicative shear biases due to color gradients are found to be at least a factor of 2 below the LSST full-depth requirement on the total systematic uncertainty in the redshift-dependent shear calibration. The analysis code and data products are publicly available (https://github.com/sowmyakth/measure_cg_bias).

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims that multiplicative shear biases due to galaxy color gradients (arising when the PSF is modeled for spatially uniform color) are at least a factor of two below the LSST full-depth requirement on total systematic uncertainty in redshift-dependent shear calibration. This is shown via forward simulations of parametric bulge+disk galaxies and via realistic chromatic surface-brightness profiles constructed from HST V- and I-band AEGIS images, with the analysis code and data products made public.

Significance. If the central result holds, the work would indicate that color-gradient contributions can be safely neglected within the LSST shear-calibration budget. The public release of code and data products is a clear strength, supporting reproducibility and future extensions by the community.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract and AEGIS sample description] Abstract and the section describing the AEGIS galaxy selection: the headline claim that the bias lies a factor of two below the LSST requirement is stated only for the AEGIS subsample with sufficient SNR to isolate the color-gradient signal. Brighter, higher-SNR galaxies are known to exhibit different morphological and color-gradient statistics than the faint population that will dominate LSST weak-lensing samples; the manuscript does not demonstrate that the color-gradient amplitude or its correlation with ellipticity is independent of magnitude or redshift, which is load-bearing for extrapolating the result to LSST.
minor comments (1)
  1. The public GitHub link is a positive feature and should be retained (and ideally version-pinned) in the published version.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful review and for identifying this important caveat regarding sample selection and extrapolation. We respond point-by-point below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract and AEGIS sample description] Abstract and the section describing the AEGIS galaxy selection: the headline claim that the bias lies a factor of two below the LSST requirement is stated only for the AEGIS subsample with sufficient SNR to isolate the color-gradient signal. Brighter, higher-SNR galaxies are known to exhibit different morphological and color-gradient statistics than the faint population that will dominate LSST weak-lensing samples; the manuscript does not demonstrate that the color-gradient amplitude or its correlation with ellipticity is independent of magnitude or redshift, which is load-bearing for extrapolating the result to LSST.

    Authors: We agree that the AEGIS results are restricted to the high-SNR subsample required to isolate the color-gradient signal from noise. The parametric bulge+disk simulations are free of this SNR limitation and already show the multiplicative bias remains at least a factor of two below the LSST requirement across varied magnitudes, redshifts, and morphological parameters. For the realistic AEGIS profiles, the SNR threshold is a measurement necessity rather than a claim of representativeness. We will revise the abstract and AEGIS section to explicitly qualify the subsample, add a short discussion of possible magnitude/redshift trends informed by the parametric suite (which exhibits no strong dependence that would violate the threshold), and note that the AEGIS galaxies serve as a realistic test case rather than a complete proxy for the faint LSST population. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: biases obtained from direct forward simulations

full rationale

The paper computes multiplicative shear biases via forward modeling: parametric bulge+disk profiles and HST AEGIS surface-brightness profiles are convolved with chromatic PSFs, then shape measurements are performed to extract the bias. These quantities are generated outputs of the simulation pipeline, not fitted parameters that are subsequently renamed as predictions, nor do they reduce by the paper's equations to the same inputs. No self-citation load-bearing steps, uniqueness theorems, or ansatzes imported from prior author work appear in the derivation chain. The result is therefore self-contained and externally falsifiable via the released code and data products.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract provides limited detail on modeling assumptions; the main unstated premises are standard domain assumptions about PSF chromaticity and galaxy population representativeness rather than new free parameters or invented entities.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The PSF size depends on wavelength in the manner modeled for LSST observations
    This wavelength dependence is required for color gradients to produce a measurable shear bias.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5740 in / 1284 out tokens · 25059 ms · 2026-05-24T23:49:39.314425+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.