2,076 research outputs found
iCosmo: an Interactive Cosmology Package
Aims: The interactive software package iCosmo, designed to perform
cosmological calculations is described. Methods: iCosmo is a software package
to perform interactive cosmological calculations for the low redshift universe.
Computing distance measures, the matter power spectrum, and the growth factor
is supported for any values of the cosmological parameters. It also computes
derived observed quantities for several cosmological probes such as cosmic
shear, baryon acoustic oscillations and type Ia supernovae. The associated
errors for these observables can be derived for customised surveys, or for
pre-set values corresponding to current or planned instruments. The code also
allows for the calculation of cosmological forecasts with Fisher matrices which
can be manipulated to combine different surveys and cosmological probes. The
code is written in the IDL language and thus benefits from the convenient
interactive features and scientific library available in this language. iCosmo
can also be used as an engine to perform cosmological calculations in batch
mode, and forms a convenient adaptive platform for the development of further
cosmological modules. With its extensive documentation, it may also serve as a
useful resource for teaching and for newcomers in the field of cosmology.
Results: The iCosmo package is described with various examples and command
sequences. The code is freely available with documentation at
http://www.icosmo.org, along with an interactive web interface and is part of
the Initiative for Cosmology, a common archive for cosmological resources.Comment: 6 pages including 2 tables and 4 figures. Accepted and published in
Astronomy and Astrophysics. Public code and further resources available at
http://www.icosmo.or
Fisher matrix decomposition for dark energy prediction
Within the context of constraining an expansion of the dark energy equation of state w(z), we show that the eigendecomposition of Fisher matrices is sensitive to both the maximum order of the expansion and the basis set choice. We investigate the Fisher matrix formalism in the case that a particular function is expanded in some basis set. As an example we show results for an all-sky weak lensing tomographic experiment. We show that the set of eigenfunctions is not unique and that the best constrained functions are only reproduced accurately at very higher order N≳ 100, a top-hat basis set requires an even higher order. We show that the common approach used for finding the marginalized eigenfunction errors is sensitive to the choice of non-w(z) parameters and priors. The eigendecomposition of Fisher matrices is a potentially useful tool that can be used to determine the predicted accuracy with which an experiment could constrain w(z). It also allows for the reconstruction of the redshift sensitivity of the experiment to changes in w(z). However, the technique is sensitive to both the order and the basis set choice. Publicly available code is available as part of icosmo at http://www.icosmo.or
Figures of merit for testing standard models: application to dark energy experiments in cosmology
Given a standard model to test, an experiment can be designed to (i) measure the standard model parameters, (ii) extend the standard model or (iii) look for evidence of deviations from the standard model. To measure (or extend) the standard model, the Fisher matrix is widely used in cosmology to predict expected parameter errors for future surveys under Gaussian assumptions. In this paper, we present a framework that can be used to design experiments that will maximize the chance of finding a deviation from the standard model. Using a simple illustrative example, discussed in Appendix A, we show that the optimal experimental configuration can depend dramatically on the optimization approach chosen. We also show some simple cosmology calculations, where we study baryonic acoustic oscillation and supernovae surveys. In doing so, we also show how external data, such as the positions of the cosmic microwave background peak measured by Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, and theory priors can be included in the analysis. In the cosmological cases that we have studied (Dark Energy Task Force Stage III), we find that the three optimization approaches yield similar results, which is reassuring and indicates that the choice of optimal experiment is fairly robust at this level. However, this may not be the case as we move to more ambitious future survey
Figures of Merit for Testing Standard Models: Application to Dark Energy Experiments in Cosmology
Given a standard model to test, an experiment can be designed to: (i) measure
the standard model parameters; (ii) extend the standard model; or (iii) look
for evidence of deviations from the standard model. To measure (or extend) the
standard model, the Fisher matrix is widely used in cosmology to predict
expected parameter errors for future surveys under Gaussian assumptions. In
this article, we present a frame- work that can be used to design experiments
such that it maximises the chance of finding a deviation from the standard
model. Using a simple illustrative example, discussed in the appendix, we show
that the optimal experimental configuration can depend dramatically on the
optimisation approach chosen. We also show some simple cosmology calculations,
where we study Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation and Supernove surveys. In doing
so, we also show how external data, such as the positions of the CMB peaks
measured by WMAP, and theory priors can be included in the analysis. In the
cosmological cases that we have studied (DETF Stage III), we find that the
three optimisation approaches yield similar results, which is reassuring and
indicates that the choice of optimal experiment is fairly robust at this level.
However, this may not be the case as we move to more ambitious future surveys.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 12 pages, 9 figure
Importance of carbon solubility and wetting properties of nickel nanoparticles for single wall nanotube growth
Optimized growth of Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes requires a full knowledge of
the actual state of the catalyst nanoparticle and its interface with the tube.
Using Tight Binding based atomistic computer simulations, we calculate carbon
adsorption isotherms on nanoparticles of nickel, a typical catalyst, and show
that carbon solubility increases for smaller nanoparticles that are either
molten or surface molten under experimental conditions. Increasing carbon
content favors the dewetting of Ni nanoparticles with respect to sp2 carbon
walls, a necessary property to limit catalyst encapsulation and deactivation.
Grand Canonical Monte Carlo simulations of the growth of tube embryos show that
wetting properties of the nanoparticles, controlled by carbon solubility, are
of fundamental importance to enable the growth, shedding a new light on the
growth mechanisms
Measuring dark matter substructure with galaxy-galaxy flexion statistics
It is of great interest to measure the properties of substructures in dark matter haloes at galactic and cluster scales. Here we suggest a method to constrain substructure properties using the variance of weak gravitational flexion in a galaxy-galaxy lensing context; this is a statistical method, requiring many foreground-background pairs of galaxies. We show the effectiveness of flexion variance in measuring substructures in N-body simulations of dark matter haloes, and present the expected galaxy-galaxy lensing signals. We show the insensitivity of the method to the overall galaxy halo mass, and predict the method's signal-to-noise ratio for a space-based all-sky survey, showing that the presence of substructure down to 109 M⊙ haloes can be reliably detecte
Weak lensing forecasts for dark energy, neutrinos and initial conditions
Weak gravitational lensing provides a sensitive probe of cosmology by measuring the mass distribution and the geometry of the low-redshift Universe. We show how an all-sky weak lensing tomographic survey can jointly constrain different sets of cosmological parameters describing dark energy, massive neutrinos (hot dark matter) and the primordial power spectrum. In order to put all sectors on an equal footing, we introduce a new parameter β, the second-order running spectral index. Using the Fisher matrix formalism with and without cosmic microwave background (CMB) priors, we examine how the constraints vary as the parameter set is enlarged. We find that weak lensing with CMB priors provides robust constraints on dark energy parameters and can simultaneously provide strong constraints on all three sectors. We find that the dark energy sector is largely insensitive to the inclusion of the other cosmological sectors. Implications for the planning of future surveys are discusse
Cosmological systematics beyond nuisance parameters: form-filling functions
In the absence of any compelling physical model, cosmological systematics are often misrepresented as statistical effects and the approach of marginalizing over extra nuisance systematic parameters is used to gauge the effect of the systematic. In this article, we argue that such an approach is risky at best since the key choice of function can have a large effect on the resultant cosmological errors. As an alternative we present a functional form-filling technique in which an unknown, residual, systematic is treated as such. Since the underlying function is unknown, we evaluate the effect of every functional form allowed by the information available (either a hard boundary or some data). Using a simple toy model, we introduce the formalism of functional form filling. We show that parameter errors can be dramatically affected by the choice of function in the case of marginalizing over a systematic, but that in contrast the functional form-filling approach is independent of the choice of basis set. We then apply the technique to cosmic shear shape measurement systematics and show that a shear calibration bias of |m(z)| ≲ 10−3 (1 +z)0.7 is required for a future all-sky photometric survey to yield unbiased cosmological parameter constraints to per cent accuracy. A module associated with the work in this paper is available through the open source icosmo code available at http://www.icosmo.or
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