HSC Year 1 cosmology results with the minimal bias method: HSC×BOSS galaxy-galaxy weak lensing and BOSS galaxy clustering
Abstract
We present cosmological parameter constraints from a blinded joint analysis of galaxy-galaxy weak lensing, \!(R), and projected correlation function, wp(R), measured from the first-year HSC (HSC-Y1) data and SDSS spectroscopic galaxies over 0.15<z<0.7. We use luminosity-limited samples as lens samples for \! and as large-scale structure tracers for wp in three redshift bins, and use the HSC-Y1 galaxy catalog to define a secure sample of source galaxies at zph>0.75 for the \! measurements, selected based on their photometric redshifts. For theoretical template, we use the "minimal bias" model for the cosmological clustering observables for the flat cosmological model. We compare the model predictions with the measurements in each redshift bin on large scales, R>12 and 8~h-1Mpc for \!(R) and wp(R), respectively, where the perturbation theory-inspired model is valid. When we employ weak priors on cosmological parameters, without CMB information, we find S8=0.936+0.092-0.086, σ8=0.85+0.16-0.11, and m=0.283+0.12-0.035 for the flat model. Although the central value of S8 appears to be larger than those inferred from other cosmological experiments, we find that the difference is consistent with expected differences due to sample variance, and our results are consistent with the other results to within the statistical uncertainties. (abriged)
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