144 research outputs found

    Analytic model for the matter power spectrum, its covariance matrix, and baryonic effects

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    We develop a model for the matter power spectrum as the sum of Zeldovich approximation and even powers of kk, i.e., A0−A2k2+A4k4−...A_0 - A_2k^2 + A_4k^4 - ..., compensated at low kk. With terms up to k4k^4 the model can predict the true power spectrum to a few percent accuracy up to k∼0.7hMpc−1k\sim 0.7 h \rm{Mpc}^{-1}, over a wide range of redshifts and models. The AnA_n coefficients contain information about cosmology, in particular amplitude of fluctuations. We write a simple form of the covariance matrix as a sum of Gaussian part and A0A_0 variance, which reproduces the simulations remarkably well. In contrast, we show that one needs an N-body simulation volume of more than 1000 (Gpc/h)3({\rm Gpc}/h)^3 to converge to 1\% accuracy on covariance matrix. We investigate the super-sample variance effect and show it can be modeled as an additional parameter that can be determined from the data. This allows a determination of σ8\sigma_8 amplitude to about 0.2\% for a survey volume of 1(Gpc/h)3({\rm Gpc}/h)^3, compared to 0.4\% otherwise. We explore the sensitivity of these coefficients to baryonic effects using hydrodynamic simulations of van Daalen (2011). We find that because of baryons redistributing matter inside halos all the coefficients A2nA_{2n} for n>0n>0 are strongly affected by baryonic effects, while A0A_0 remains almost unchanged, a consequence of halo mass conservation. Our results suggest that observations such as weak lensing power spectrum can be effectively marginalized over the baryonic effects, while still preserving the bulk of the cosmological information contained in A0A_0 and Zeldovich terms.Comment: 21 pages,11 figures, 1 table; Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Perturbative approach to covariance matrix of the matter power spectrum

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    We evaluate the covariance matrix of the matter power spectrum using perturbation theory up to dominant terms at 1-loop order and compare it to numerical simulations. We decompose the covariance matrix into the disconnected (Gaussian) part, trispectrum from the modes outside the survey (beat coupling or super-sample variance), and trispectrum from the modes inside the survey, and show how the different components contribute to the overall covariance matrix. We find the agreement with the simulations is at a 10\% level up to k∼1hMpc−1k \sim 1 h {\rm Mpc^{-1}}. We show that all the connected components are dominated by the large-scale modes (k<0.1hMpc−1k<0.1 h {\rm Mpc^{-1}}), regardless of the value of the wavevectors k, k′k,\, k' of the covariance matrix, suggesting that one must be careful in applying the jackknife or bootstrap methods to the covariance matrix. We perform an eigenmode decomposition of the connected part of the covariance matrix, showing that at higher kk it is dominated by a single eigenmode. The full covariance matrix can be approximated as the disconnected part only, with the connected part being treated as an external nuisance parameter with a known scale dependence, and a known prior on its variance for a given survey volume. Finally, we provide a prescription for how to evaluate the covariance matrix from small box simulations without the need to simulate large volumes.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures, 1 tabl

    The biasing of baryons on the cluster mass function and cosmological parameter estimation

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    We study the effect of baryonic processes on the halo mass function in the galaxy cluster mass range using a catalogue of 153 high resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations performed with the AMR code ramses. We use the results of our simulations within a simple analytical model to gauge the effects of baryon physics on the halo mass function. Neglect of AGN feedback leads to a significant boost in the cluster mass function similar to that reported by other authors. However, including AGN feedback not only gives rise to systems that are similar to observed galaxy clusters, but they also reverse the global baryonic effects on the clusters. The resulting mass function is closer to the unmodified dark matter halo mass function but still contains a mass dependent bias at the 5-10% level. These effects bias measurements of the cosmological parameters, such as σ8\sigma_8 and Ωm\Omega_m. For current cluster surveys baryonic effects are within the noise for current survey volumes, but forthcoming and planned large SZ, X-ray and multi-wavelength surveys will be biased at the percent level by these processes. The predictions for the halo mass function including baryonic effects need to be carefully studied with larger and improved simulations. However, simulations of full cosmological boxes with the resolution we achieve and including AGN feedback are still computationally challenging.Comment: 12 pages, 3 tables, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Constraining galaxy cluster temperatures and redshifts with eROSITA survey data

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    The nature of dark energy is imprinted in the large-scale structure of the Universe and thus in the mass and redshift distribution of galaxy clusters. The upcoming eROSITA mission will exploit this method of probing dark energy by detecting roughly 100,000 clusters of galaxies in X-rays. For a precise cosmological analysis the various galaxy cluster properties need to be measured with high precision and accuracy. To predict these characteristics of eROSITA galaxy clusters and to optimise optical follow-up observations, we estimate the precision and the accuracy with which eROSITA will be able to determine galaxy cluster temperatures and redshifts from X-ray spectra. Additionally, we present the total number of clusters for which these two properties will be available from the eROSITA survey directly. During its four years of all-sky surveys, eROSITA will determine cluster temperatures with relative uncertainties of Delta(T)/T<10% at the 68%-confidence level for clusters up to redshifts of z~0.16 which corresponds to ~1,670 new clusters with precise properties. Redshift information itself will become available with a precision of Delta(z)/(1+z)<10% for clusters up to z~0.45. Additionally, we estimate how the number of clusters with precise properties increases with a deepening of the exposure. Furthermore, the biases in the best-fit temperatures as well as in the estimated uncertainties are quantified and shown to be negligible in the relevant parameter range in general. For the remaining parameter sets, we provide correction functions and factors. The eROSITA survey will increase the number of galaxy clusters with precise temperature measurements by a factor of 5-10. Thus the instrument presents itself as a powerful tool for the determination of tight constraints on the cosmological parameters.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A; 17 pages, 20 figure

    Analytic model for the matter power spectrum, its covariance matrix and baryonic effects

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    We develop a model for the matter power spectrum as the sum of Zeldovich approximation and even powers of k, i.e. A0−A2k2+A4k4− , compensated at low k. With terms up to k4, the model can predict the true power spectrum to a few per cent accuracy up to k ∼ 0.7 h Mpc−1, over a wide range of redshifts and models. The An coefficients contain information about cosmology, in particular amplitude of fluctuations. We write a simple form of the covariance matrix as a sum of Gaussian part and A0 variance, which reproduces the simulations remarkably well. In contrast, we show that one needs an N-body simulation volume of more than 1000 (Gpc h−1)3 to converge to 1 per cent accuracy on covariance matrix. We investigate the supersample variance effect and show it can be modelled as an additional parameter that can be determined from the data. This allows a determination of σ8 amplitude to about 0.2 per cent for a survey volume of 1(Gpc h−1)3, compared to 0.4 per cent otherwise. We explore the sensitivity of these coefficients to baryonic effects using hydrodynamic simulations of van Daalen et al. We find that because of baryons redistributing matter inside haloes all the coefficients A2n for n > 0 are strongly affected by baryonic effects, while A0 remains almost unchanged, a consequence of halo mass conservation. Our results suggest that observations such as weak lensing power spectrum can be effectively marginalized over the baryonic effects, while still preserving the bulk of the cosmological information contained in A0 and Zeldovich term

    Mass-Galaxy offsets in Abell 3827, 2218 and 1689: intrinsic properties or line-of-sight substructures?

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    We have made mass maps of three strong-lensing clusters, Abell 3827, Abell 2218 and Abell 1689, in order to test for mass-light offsets. The technique used is GRALE, which enables lens reconstruction with minimal assumptions, and specifically with no information about the cluster light being given. In the first two of these clusters, we find local mass peaks in the central regions that are displaced from the nearby galaxies by a few to several kpc. These offsets {\em could\/} be due to line of sight structure unrelated to the clusters, but that is very unlikely, given the typical levels of chance line-of-sight coincidences in ΛCDM\Lambda CDM simulations --- for Abell 3827 and Abell 2218 the offsets appear to be intrinsic. In the case of Abell 1689, we see no significant offsets in the central region, but we do detect a possible line of sight structure: it appears only when sources at z\ga 3 are used for reconstructing the mass. We discuss possible origins of the mass-galaxy offsets in Abell 3827 and Abell 2218: these include pure gravitational effects like dynamical friction, but also non-standard mechanisms like self-interacting dark-matter.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures; Accepted for publication in MNRA
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