62 research outputs found
Hierarchical Cosmic Shear Power Spectrum Inference
We develop a Bayesian hierarchical modelling approach for cosmic shear power
spectrum inference, jointly sampling from the posterior distribution of the
cosmic shear field and its (tomographic) power spectra. Inference of the shear
power spectrum is a powerful intermediate product for a cosmic shear analysis,
since it requires very few model assumptions and can be used to perform
inference on a wide range of cosmological models \emph{a posteriori} without
loss of information. We show that joint posterior for the shear map and power
spectrum can be sampled effectively by Gibbs sampling, iteratively drawing
samples from the map and power spectrum, each conditional on the other. This
approach neatly circumvents difficulties associated with complicated survey
geometry and masks that plague frequentist power spectrum estimators, since the
power spectrum inference provides prior information about the field in masked
regions at every sampling step. We demonstrate this approach for inference of
tomographic shear -mode, -mode and -cross power spectra from a
simulated galaxy shear catalogue with a number of important features; galaxies
distributed on the sky and in redshift with photometric redshift uncertainties,
realistic random ellipticity noise for every galaxy and a complicated survey
mask. The obtained posterior distributions for the tomographic power spectrum
coefficients recover the underlying simulated power spectra for both - and
-modes.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, accepted by MNRA
Simulating weak gravitational lensing for cosmology
This thesis will present a new cosmic shear analysis pipeline SUNGLASS (Simulated
UNiverses for Gravitational Lensing Analysis and Shear Surveys). SUNGLASS is
a pipeline that rapidly generates simulated universes for weak lensing and cosmic
shear analysis. The pipeline forms suites of cosmological N-body simulations and
performs tomographic cosmic shear analysis using a novel line-of-sight integration
through the simulations while saving the particle lightcone information. Galaxy
shear and convergence catalogues with realistic 3-D galaxy redshift distributions are
produced for the purposes of testing weak lensing analysis techniques and generating
covariance matrices for data analysis and cosmological parameter estimation. This
thesis presents a suite of fast medium-resolution simulations with shear and convergence maps for a generic 100 square degree survey out to a redshift of z = 1.5, with
angular power spectra agreeing with the theoretical expectations to better than a
few percent accuracy up to ℓ = 103 for all source redshifts up to z = 1.5 and
wavenumbers up to ℓ = 2000 for source redshifts z ≥ 1.1. A two-parameter Gaussian likelihood analysis of Ωm and σ8 is also performed on the suite of simulations
for a 2-D weak lensing survey, demonstrating that the cosmological parameters are
recovered from the simulations and the covariance matrices are stable for data analysis, with negligible bias.
An investigation into the accuracy of traditional Fisher matrix calculations is presented. Fisher Information Matrix methods are commonly used in cosmology to estimate the accuracy that cosmological parameters can be measured with a given experiment, and to optimise the design of experiments. However, the standard approach
usually assumes both data and parameter estimates are Gaussian-distributed. Further, for survey forecasts and optimisation it is usually assumed the power-spectra
covariance matrix is diagonal in Fourier-space. But in the low-redshift Universe,
non-linear mode-coupling will tend to correlate small-scale power, moving information from lower to higher-order moments of the field. This movement of information
will change the predictions of cosmological parameter accuracy. In this thesis, the
loss of information is quantified by comparing näıve Gaussian Fisher matrix forecasts
with a Maximum Likelihood parameter estimation analysis of the suite of mock weak
lensing catalogues derived from the SUNGLASS pipeline, for 2-D and tomographic
shear analyses of a Euclid-like survey. In both cases the 68% confidence area of the Ωm − σ8 plane is found to increase by a factor 5. However, the marginal errors increase by just 20 to 40%. A new method is proposed to model the effects of non-linear
shear-power mode-coupling in the Fisher Matrix by approximating the shear-power
distribution as a multivariate Gaussian with a covariance matrix derived from the
mock weak lensing survey. The findings in this thesis show that this approximation
can reproduce the 68% confidence regions of the full Maximum Likelihood analysis
in the Ωm − σ8 plane to high accuracy for both 2-D and tomographic weak lensing
surveys. Finally, three multi-parameter analyses of (Ωm, σ8, ns), (Ωm, σ8, ns,
ΩΛ)and (Ωm, σ8, h, ns, w0, wa) are performed to compare the Gaussian and non-linear
mode-coupled Fisher matrix contours. The multi-parameter volumes of the 1σ error contours for the six-parameter non-linear Fisher analysis are consistently larger
than for the Gaussian case, and the shape of the 68% confidence volume is modified.
These results strongly suggest that future Fisher Matrix estimates of cosmological
parameter accuracies should include mode-coupling effects
Predicting H{\alpha} emission line galaxy counts for future galaxy redshift surveys
Knowledge of the number density of H emitting galaxies is vital for
assessing the scientific impact of the Euclid and WFIRST missions. In this work
we present predictions from a galaxy formation model, Galacticus, for the
cumulative number counts of H-emitting galaxies. We couple Galacticus
to three different dust attenuation methods and examine the counts using each
method. A minimisation approach is used to compare the model
predictions to observed galaxy counts and calibrate the dust parameters. We
find that weak dust attenuation is required for the Galacticus counts to be
broadly consistent with the observations, though the optimum dust parameters
return large values for , suggesting that further calibration of
Galacticus is necessary. The model predictions are also consistent with
observed estimates for the optical depth and the H luminosity function.
Finally we present forecasts for the redshift distributions and number counts
for two Euclid-like and one WFIRST-like survey. For a Euclid-like survey with
redshift range and H blended
flux limit of we
predict a number density between 3900--4800 galaxies per square degree. For a
WFIRST-like survey with redshift range and blended
flux limit of we
predict a number density between 10400--15200 galaxies per square degree.Comment: 21 pages (including appendix), 12 figures, 6 tables. Accepted b
Complementary Cosmological Simulations
Cosmic variance limits the accuracy of cosmological N-body simulations,
introducing bias in statistics such as the power spectrum, halo mass function,
or the cosmic shear. We provide new methods to measure and reduce the effect of
cosmic variance in existing and new simulations. We run pairs of simulations
using phase shifted initial conditions with matching amplitudes. We set the
initial amplitudes of the Fourier modes to ensure that the average power
spectrum of the pair is equal to the cosmic mean power spectrum from linear
theory. The average power spectrum of a pair of such simulations remains
consistent with the estimated non-linear spectra of the state-of-the-art
methods even at late times. We also show that the effect of cosmic variance on
any analysis involving a cosmological simulation can be estimated by using the
complementary pair of the original simulation. To demonstrate the effectiveness
of our novel technique, we simulated a complementary pair of the original
Millennium run and quantified the degree to which cosmic variance affected its
the power spectrum. The average power spectrum of the original and
complementary Millennium simulation was able to directly resolve the baryon
acoustic oscillation features.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A
Constraining cosmology with shear peak statistics: tomographic analysis
International audienceThe abundance of peaks in weak gravitational lensing maps is a potentially powerful cosmological tool, complementary to measurements of the shear power spectrum. We study peaks detected directly in shear maps, rather than convergence maps, an approach that has the advantage of working directly with the observable quantity, the galaxy ellipticity catalog. Using large numbers of numerical simulations to accurately predict the abundance of peaks and their covariance, we quantify the cosmological constraints attainable by a large-area survey similar to that expected from the Euclid mission, focusing on the density parameter, Ωm, and on the power spectrum normalization, σ8, for illustration. We present a tomographic peak counting method that improves the conditional (marginal) constraints by a factor of 1.2 (2) over those from a two-dimensional (i.e., non-tomographic) peak-count analysis. We find that peak statistics provide constraints an order of magnitude less accurate than those from the cluster sample in the ideal situation of a perfectly known observable-mass relation; however, when the scaling relation is not known a priori, the shear-peak constraints are twice as strong and orthogonal to the cluster constraints, highlighting the value of using both clusters and shear-peak statistics
Report from the Tri-Agency Cosmological Simulation Task Force
The Tri-Agency Cosmological Simulations (TACS) Task Force was formed when
Program Managers from the Department of Energy (DOE), the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA), and the National Science Foundation (NSF)
expressed an interest in receiving input into the cosmological simulations
landscape related to the upcoming DOE/NSF Vera Rubin Observatory (Rubin),
NASA/ESA's Euclid, and NASA's Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST).
The Co-Chairs of TACS, Katrin Heitmann and Alina Kiessling, invited community
scientists from the USA and Europe who are each subject matter experts and are
also members of one or more of the surveys to contribute. The following report
represents the input from TACS that was delivered to the Agencies in December
2018.Comment: 36 pages, 3 figures. Delivered to NASA, NSF, and DOE in Dec 201
Galaxy alignments: An overview
The alignments between galaxies, their underlying matter structures, and the
cosmic web constitute vital ingredients for a comprehensive understanding of
gravity, the nature of matter, and structure formation in the Universe. We
provide an overview on the state of the art in the study of these alignment
processes and their observational signatures, aimed at a non-specialist
audience. The development of the field over the past one hundred years is
briefly reviewed. We also discuss the impact of galaxy alignments on
measurements of weak gravitational lensing, and discuss avenues for making
theoretical and observational progress over the coming decade.Comment: 43 pages excl. references, 16 figures; minor changes to match version
published in Space Science Reviews; part of a topical volume on galaxy
alignments, with companion papers at arXiv:1504.05546 and arXiv:1504.0546
Galaxy alignments: Observations and impact on cosmology
Galaxy shapes are not randomly oriented, rather they are statistically
aligned in a way that can depend on formation environment, history and galaxy
type. Studying the alignment of galaxies can therefore deliver important
information about the physics of galaxy formation and evolution as well as the
growth of structure in the Universe. In this review paper we summarise key
measurements of galaxy alignments, divided by galaxy type, scale and
environment. We also cover the statistics and formalism necessary to understand
the observations in the literature. With the emergence of weak gravitational
lensing as a precision probe of cosmology, galaxy alignments have taken on an
added importance because they can mimic cosmic shear, the effect of
gravitational lensing by large-scale structure on observed galaxy shapes. This
makes galaxy alignments, commonly referred to as intrinsic alignments, an
important systematic effect in weak lensing studies. We quantify the impact of
intrinsic alignments on cosmic shear surveys and finish by reviewing practical
mitigation techniques which attempt to remove contamination by intrinsic
alignments.Comment: 52 pages excl. references, 16 figures; minor changes to match version
published in Space Science Reviews; part of a topical volume on galaxy
alignments, with companion papers arXiv:1504.05456 and arXiv:1504.0554
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