Impact of lensing magnification on the power spectrum turnover
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 20:05 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Lensing magnification shifts the turnover scale of the galaxy power spectrum at high redshifts and biases its recovery as a standard ruler.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Lensing magnification produces a scale-dependent correction to the monopole of the galaxy power spectrum that displaces the turnover scale k0. In mocks resembling the Euclid H-alpha survey the maximum bias reaches about 0.4 sigma; in mocks resembling the proposed MegaMapper Lyman-break galaxy survey the bias reaches about 3.6 sigma. To keep the bias below 1 sigma the usable redshift range for a MegaMapper-like survey must be cut at z approximately 2.9, and the turnover feature itself disappears for z greater than or equal to 3.7.
What carries the argument
The lensing magnification correction applied to the monopole of the observed galaxy power spectrum, which alters its shape and displaces the turnover scale k0.
If this is right
- The turnover remains a usable standard ruler in Euclid-like surveys over their full redshift range once the lensing term is included.
- MegaMapper-like surveys must restrict turnover analyses to z less than or equal to 2.9 to avoid biases exceeding 1 sigma.
- Data above z approximately 3.7 in MegaMapper-like surveys cannot recover the intrinsic turnover without additional modeling.
- Stacking multiple redshift bins amplifies the need to model the lensing correction to prevent cumulative bias in the combined turnover measurement.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Unmodeled lensing shifts could lead high-redshift surveys to infer an incorrect redshift for matter-radiation equality.
- Joint fits that marginalize over magnification bias parameters might still recover an unbiased turnover from the higher-redshift bins.
- Analogous scale-dependent corrections could appear in intensity-mapping or photometric surveys and would require similar treatment.
- Including redshift-space distortions in the mocks would test whether they partially cancel or reinforce the lensing-induced shift.
Load-bearing premise
The mock surveys isolate the lensing magnification effect on the monopole without dominant contamination from other scale-dependent systematics.
What would settle it
A high-redshift survey measurement of the galaxy power spectrum monopole that recovers the same turnover scale whether or not the lensing magnification term is included in the model would falsify the predicted shift.
read the original abstract
The turnover scale $k_0$ of the matter power spectrum -- and consequently of the standard galaxy power spectrum monopole -- encodes a fundamental signature of matter-radiation equality and constitutes an important standard ruler independent of baryon acoustic oscillations. In principle, we can detect the turnover at multiple redshifts and amplify the signal by stacking redshift bins. However, in spectroscopic surveys reaching high redshifts, such as the Euclid H$\alpha$ survey and the proposed MegaMapper Lyman-break galaxy survey, the monopole of the observed galaxy power spectrum receives a scale-dependent correction from lensing magnification. This can modify the signal shape and shift the turnover scale, undermining its use as a standard ruler. Using mock surveys similar to Euclid and MegaMapper, we forecast this shift and the consequent bias in the turnover scale that is recovered from the mock data. The shift in the turnover scale grows with redshift, leading to a maximum bias of $\sim 0.4\sigma$ (Euclid-like) and $\sim 3.6\sigma$ (MegaMapper-like). To avoid a bias $>1\sigma$, the maximum redshift for a MegaMapper-like survey is $z\approx 2.9$. Data in the remaining range $2.9\lesssim z\le 5$ does not directly provide a reliable recovery of the intrinsic turnover. In fact, we find that the turnover vanishes in a MegaMapper-like survey for $z\gtrsim 3.7$. Our results show that the lensing correction to the monopole should be included and carefully modelled when surveys are used to measure the cosmological turnover at high redshifts.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that lensing magnification introduces a scale-dependent correction to the galaxy power spectrum monopole at high redshifts in surveys like Euclid and MegaMapper. Using mock surveys, it forecasts that the resulting shift in the turnover scale k0 grows with redshift, producing biases of ~0.4σ (Euclid-like) and ~3.6σ (MegaMapper-like) in recovered k0, with the turnover vanishing for z≳3.7 in MegaMapper-like cases. It concludes that the lensing term must be modeled to use the turnover as a standard ruler beyond z≈2.9 for MegaMapper-like surveys.
Significance. If the mock-based forecasts hold, the result is significant because it quantifies a systematic that can bias a fundamental scale (matter-radiation equality turnover) independent of BAO, directly affecting cosmological constraints from next-generation high-z spectroscopic surveys. The provision of concrete redshift thresholds and bias magnitudes offers actionable guidance for survey analysis pipelines.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract and Methods] Abstract and Methods (mock construction): The forecasts rest on the difference between two mock monopoles being attributable solely to the added lensing magnification term. The abstract states mocks are 'similar to' the surveys with the correction 'added to the monopole,' but provides no explicit validation that the base galaxy power spectrum excludes or controls for scale-dependent contributions from redshift-space distortions (Kaiser + FoG) or survey-window convolutions in the turnover region. This isolation is load-bearing for the reported Δk0 values, the 3.6σ bias, and the z≳3.7 vanishing claim.
- [Results] Results (bias forecasts): The maximum biases (~0.4σ Euclid, ~3.6σ MegaMapper) and the z≈2.9 limit for <1σ bias are derived from fits to mock data. Without reported details on error propagation, turnover-fitting procedure, or cross-validation against analytic models of the monopole, the precise sigma values remain provisional and cannot yet support the headline quantitative conclusions.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful and constructive review. We address each major comment below and indicate where revisions will be made to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and Methods] Abstract and Methods (mock construction): The forecasts rest on the difference between two mock monopoles being attributable solely to the added lensing magnification term. The abstract states mocks are 'similar to' the surveys with the correction 'added to the monopole,' but provides no explicit validation that the base galaxy power spectrum excludes or controls for scale-dependent contributions from redshift-space distortions (Kaiser + FoG) or survey-window convolutions in the turnover region. This isolation is load-bearing for the reported Δk0 values, the 3.6σ bias, and the z≳3.7 vanishing claim.
Authors: The base mock monopoles are generated from the standard galaxy clustering model (linear bias, Kaiser RSD, and FoG damping) without the lensing magnification term; the lensing correction is then added to produce the second set of monopoles. Survey window convolutions are applied identically in both cases. The difference therefore isolates the lensing contribution by construction. To make this explicit, we will add a dedicated paragraph in the Methods section that (i) states the exact model components used for the base spectrum and (ii) shows a direct comparison of the base mock monopole to the analytic expectation in the turnover region (k ≈ 0.005–0.02 h Mpc⁻¹). This addition addresses the referee’s concern without altering the reported results. revision: partial
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Referee: [Results] Results (bias forecasts): The maximum biases (~0.4σ Euclid, ~3.6σ MegaMapper) and the z≈2.9 limit for <1σ bias are derived from fits to mock data. Without reported details on error propagation, turnover-fitting procedure, or cross-validation against analytic models of the monopole, the precise sigma values remain provisional and cannot yet support the headline quantitative conclusions.
Authors: We agree that the fitting and error-analysis details were insufficiently documented. In the revised manuscript we will expand the Results section to include: (1) the functional form and free parameters of the turnover model fitted to each mock monopole, (2) the covariance matrix construction from the mock ensemble and the resulting parameter uncertainties, and (3) a cross-check in which the same fitting pipeline is applied to analytic monopoles (with and without lensing) to confirm recovery of the input k0. These additions will substantiate the quoted bias values and redshift thresholds. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; forecasts derived from forward-modeled mocks
full rationale
The paper builds mock galaxy power spectrum monopoles that incorporate an explicit lensing magnification correction term, then extracts the turnover scale k0 from those mocks and compares to the uncorrected case. This is a standard forward-modeling forecast whose output (the redshift-dependent shift and bias values) is not equivalent to any fitted input or self-citation chain. No equations or sections reduce a claimed prediction to a parameter that was itself tuned on the same data; the mocks are described as independent constructions similar to the target surveys. The central claims therefore remain self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Lensing magnification produces a scale-dependent additive correction to the observed galaxy power spectrum monopole that can be isolated in mocks.
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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