321 research outputs found
Time evolution of intrinsic alignments of galaxies
Intrinsic alignments (IA), correlations between the intrinsic shapes and
orientations of galaxies on the sky, are both a significant systematic in weak
lensing and a probe of the effect of large-scale structure on galactic
structure and angular momentum. In the era of precision cosmology, it is thus
especially important to model IA with high accuracy. Efforts to use
cosmological perturbation theory to model the dependence of IA on the
large-scale structure have thus far been relatively successful; however, extant
models do not consistently account for time evolution. In particular, advection
of galaxies due to peculiar velocities alters the impact of IA, because galaxy
positions when observed are generally different from their positions at the
epoch when IA is believed to be set. In this work, we evolve the galaxy IA from
the time of galaxy formation to the time at which they are observed, including
the effects of this advection, and show how this process naturally leads to a
dependence of IA on the velocity shear. We calculate the galaxy-galaxy-IA
bispectrum to tree level (in the linear matter density) in terms of the evolved
IA coefficients. We then discuss the implications for weak lensing systematics
as well as for studies of galaxy formation and evolution. We find that
considering advection introduces nonlocality into the bispectrum, and that the
degree of nonlocality represents the memory of a galaxy's path from the time of
its formation to the time of observation. We discuss how this result can be
used to constrain the redshift at which IA is determined and provide Fisher
estimation for the relevant measurements using the example of SDSS-BOSS.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
First measurement of gravitational lensing by cosmic voids in SDSS
We report the first measurement of the diminutive lensing signal arising from
matter underdensities associated with cosmic voids. While undetectable
individually, by stacking the weak gravitational shear estimates around 901
voids detected in SDSS DR7 by Sutter et al. (2012a), we find substantial
evidence for a depression of the lensing signal compared to the cosmic mean.
This depression is most pronounced at the void radius, in agreement with
analytical models of void matter profiles. Even with the largest void sample
and imaging survey available today, we cannot put useful constraints on the
radial dark-matter void profile. We invite independent investigations of our
findings by releasing data and analysis code to the public at
https://github.com/pmelchior/void-lensingComment: 6 pages, 5 figures, as accepted by MNRA
Accurate cosmic shear errors: do we need ensembles of simulations?
Accurate inference of cosmology from weak lensing shear requires an accurate shear power spectrum covariance matrix. Here, we investigate this accuracy requirement and quantify the relative importance of the Gaussian (G), super-sample covariance (SSC) and connected non-Gaussian (cNG) contributions to the covariance. Specifically, we forecast cosmological parameter constraints for future wide-field surveys and study how different covariance matrix components affect parameter bounds. Our main result is that the cNG term represents only a small and potentially negligible contribution to statistical parameter errors: the errors obtained using the G+SSC subset are within lesssim 5% of those obtained with the full G+SSC+cNG matrix for a Euclid-like survey. This result also holds for the shear two-point correlation function, variations in survey specifications and for different analytical prescriptions of the cNG term. The cNG term is that which is often tackled using numerically expensive ensembles of survey realizations. Our results suggest however that the accuracy of analytical or approximate numerical methods to compute the cNG term is likely to be sufficient for cosmic shear inference from the next generation of surveys
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