14 research outputs found

    Diversity increases biomass production for trematode parasites in snails

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    Increasing species diversity typically increases biomass in experimental assemblages. But there is uncertainty concerning the mechanisms of diversity effects and whether experimental findings are relevant to ecological process in nature. Hosts for parasites provide natural, discrete replicates of parasite assemblages. We considered how diversity affects standing-stock biomass for a highly interactive parasite guild: trematode parasitic castrators in snails. In 185 naturally occurring habitat replicates (individual hosts), diverse parasite assemblages had greater biomass than single-species assemblages, including those of their most productive species. Additionally, positive diversity effects strengthened as species segregated along a secondary niche axis (space). The most subordinate species—also the most productive when alone—altered the general positive effect, and was associated with negative diversity effects on biomass. These findings, on a previously unstudied consumer class, extend previous research to illustrate that functional diversity and species identity may generally both explain how diversity influences biomass production in natural assemblages of competing species

    Euclid preparation. LensMC, weak lensing cosmic shear measurement with forward modelling and Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling

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    International audienceLensMC is a weak lensing shear measurement method developed for Euclid and Stage-IV surveys. It is based on forward modelling to deal with convolution by a point spread function with comparable size to many galaxies; sampling the posterior distribution of galaxy parameters via Markov Chain Monte Carlo; and marginalisation over nuisance parameters for each of the 1.5 billion galaxies observed by Euclid. The scientific performance is quantified through high-fidelity images based on the Euclid Flagship simulations and emulation of the Euclid VIS images; realistic clustering with a mean surface number density of 250 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<29.5I_{\rm E}<29.5) for galaxies, and 6 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26I_{\rm E}<26) for stars; and a diffraction-limited chromatic point spread function with a full width at half maximum of 0. ⁣â€Čâ€Č20.^{\!\prime\prime}2 and spatial variation across the field of view. Objects are measured with a density of 90 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26.5I_{\rm E}<26.5) in 4500 deg2^2. The total shear bias is broken down into measurement (our main focus here) and selection effects (which will be addressed elsewhere). We find: measurement multiplicative and additive biases of m1=(−3.6±0.2)×10−3m_1=(-3.6\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, m2=(−4.3±0.2)×10−3m_2=(-4.3\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, c1=(−1.78±0.03)×10−4c_1=(-1.78\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}, c2=(0.09±0.03)×10−4c_2=(0.09\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}; a large detection bias with a multiplicative component of 1.2×10−21.2\times10^{-2} and an additive component of −3×10−4-3\times10^{-4}; and a measurement PSF leakage of α1=(−9±3)×10−4\alpha_1=(-9\pm3)\times10^{-4} and α2=(2±3)×10−4\alpha_2=(2\pm3)\times10^{-4}. When model bias is suppressed, the obtained measurement biases are close to Euclid requirement and largely dominated by undetected faint galaxies (−5×10−3-5\times10^{-3}). Although significant, model bias will be straightforward to calibrate given the weak sensitivity

    Euclid preparation. LensMC, weak lensing cosmic shear measurement with forward modelling and Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling

    No full text
    International audienceLensMC is a weak lensing shear measurement method developed for Euclid and Stage-IV surveys. It is based on forward modelling to deal with convolution by a point spread function with comparable size to many galaxies; sampling the posterior distribution of galaxy parameters via Markov Chain Monte Carlo; and marginalisation over nuisance parameters for each of the 1.5 billion galaxies observed by Euclid. The scientific performance is quantified through high-fidelity images based on the Euclid Flagship simulations and emulation of the Euclid VIS images; realistic clustering with a mean surface number density of 250 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<29.5I_{\rm E}<29.5) for galaxies, and 6 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26I_{\rm E}<26) for stars; and a diffraction-limited chromatic point spread function with a full width at half maximum of 0. ⁣â€Čâ€Č20.^{\!\prime\prime}2 and spatial variation across the field of view. Objects are measured with a density of 90 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26.5I_{\rm E}<26.5) in 4500 deg2^2. The total shear bias is broken down into measurement (our main focus here) and selection effects (which will be addressed elsewhere). We find: measurement multiplicative and additive biases of m1=(−3.6±0.2)×10−3m_1=(-3.6\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, m2=(−4.3±0.2)×10−3m_2=(-4.3\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, c1=(−1.78±0.03)×10−4c_1=(-1.78\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}, c2=(0.09±0.03)×10−4c_2=(0.09\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}; a large detection bias with a multiplicative component of 1.2×10−21.2\times10^{-2} and an additive component of −3×10−4-3\times10^{-4}; and a measurement PSF leakage of α1=(−9±3)×10−4\alpha_1=(-9\pm3)\times10^{-4} and α2=(2±3)×10−4\alpha_2=(2\pm3)\times10^{-4}. When model bias is suppressed, the obtained measurement biases are close to Euclid requirement and largely dominated by undetected faint galaxies (−5×10−3-5\times10^{-3}). Although significant, model bias will be straightforward to calibrate given the weak sensitivity

    Euclid preparation. LensMC, weak lensing cosmic shear measurement with forward modelling and Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling

    No full text
    International audienceLensMC is a weak lensing shear measurement method developed for Euclid and Stage-IV surveys. It is based on forward modelling to deal with convolution by a point spread function with comparable size to many galaxies; sampling the posterior distribution of galaxy parameters via Markov Chain Monte Carlo; and marginalisation over nuisance parameters for each of the 1.5 billion galaxies observed by Euclid. The scientific performance is quantified through high-fidelity images based on the Euclid Flagship simulations and emulation of the Euclid VIS images; realistic clustering with a mean surface number density of 250 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<29.5I_{\rm E}<29.5) for galaxies, and 6 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26I_{\rm E}<26) for stars; and a diffraction-limited chromatic point spread function with a full width at half maximum of 0. ⁣â€Čâ€Č20.^{\!\prime\prime}2 and spatial variation across the field of view. Objects are measured with a density of 90 arcmin−2^{-2} (IE<26.5I_{\rm E}<26.5) in 4500 deg2^2. The total shear bias is broken down into measurement (our main focus here) and selection effects (which will be addressed elsewhere). We find: measurement multiplicative and additive biases of m1=(−3.6±0.2)×10−3m_1=(-3.6\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, m2=(−4.3±0.2)×10−3m_2=(-4.3\pm0.2)\times10^{-3}, c1=(−1.78±0.03)×10−4c_1=(-1.78\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}, c2=(0.09±0.03)×10−4c_2=(0.09\pm0.03)\times10^{-4}; a large detection bias with a multiplicative component of 1.2×10−21.2\times10^{-2} and an additive component of −3×10−4-3\times10^{-4}; and a measurement PSF leakage of α1=(−9±3)×10−4\alpha_1=(-9\pm3)\times10^{-4} and α2=(2±3)×10−4\alpha_2=(2\pm3)\times10^{-4}. When model bias is suppressed, the obtained measurement biases are close to Euclid requirement and largely dominated by undetected faint galaxies (−5×10−3-5\times10^{-3}). Although significant, model bias will be straightforward to calibrate given the weak sensitivity

    Euclid preparation. Observational expectations for redshift z<7 active galactic nuclei in the Euclid Wide and Deep surveys

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    International audienceWe forecast the expected population of active galactic nuclei (AGN) observable in the Euclid Wide Survey (EWS) and Euclid Deep Survey (EDS). Starting from an X-ray luminosity function (XLF) we generate volume-limited samples of the AGN expected in the survey footprints. Each AGN is assigned an SED appropriate for its X-ray luminosity and redshift, with perturbations sampled from empirical distributions. The photometric detectability of each AGN is assessed via mock observation of the assigned SED. We estimate 40 million AGN will be detectable in at least one band in the EWS and 0.24 million in the EDS, corresponding to surface densities of 2.8×\times103^{3} deg−2^{-2} and 4.7×\times103^{3} deg−2^{-2}. Employing colour selection criteria on our simulated data we select a sample of 4.8×\times106^{6} (331 deg−2^{-2}) AGN in the EWS and 1.7×\times104^{4} (346 deg−2^{-2}) in the EDS, amounting to 10% and 8% of the AGN detectable in the EWS and EDS. Including ancillary Rubin/LSST bands improves the completeness and purity of AGN selection. These data roughly double the total number of selected AGN to comprise 21% and 15% of the detectable AGN in the EWS and EDS. The total expected sample of colour-selected AGN contains 6.0×\times106^{6} (74%) unobscured AGN and 2.1×\times106^{6} (26%) obscured AGN, covering 0.02≀zâ‰Č5.20.02 \leq z \lesssim 5.2 and 43≀log⁥10(Lbol/ergs−1)≀4743 \leq \log_{10} (L_{bol} / erg s^{-1}) \leq 47. With this simple colour selection, expected surface densities are already comparable to the yield of modern X-ray and mid-infrared surveys of similar area. The relative uncertainty on our expectation for detectable AGN is 6.7% for the EWS and 12.5% for the EDS, driven by the uncertainty of the XLF

    Euclid preparation. Observational expectations for redshift z<7 active galactic nuclei in the Euclid Wide and Deep surveys

    No full text
    International audienceWe forecast the expected population of active galactic nuclei (AGN) observable in the Euclid Wide Survey (EWS) and Euclid Deep Survey (EDS). Starting from an X-ray luminosity function (XLF) we generate volume-limited samples of the AGN expected in the survey footprints. Each AGN is assigned an SED appropriate for its X-ray luminosity and redshift, with perturbations sampled from empirical distributions. The photometric detectability of each AGN is assessed via mock observation of the assigned SED. We estimate 40 million AGN will be detectable in at least one band in the EWS and 0.24 million in the EDS, corresponding to surface densities of 2.8×\times103^{3} deg−2^{-2} and 4.7×\times103^{3} deg−2^{-2}. Employing colour selection criteria on our simulated data we select a sample of 4.8×\times106^{6} (331 deg−2^{-2}) AGN in the EWS and 1.7×\times104^{4} (346 deg−2^{-2}) in the EDS, amounting to 10% and 8% of the AGN detectable in the EWS and EDS. Including ancillary Rubin/LSST bands improves the completeness and purity of AGN selection. These data roughly double the total number of selected AGN to comprise 21% and 15% of the detectable AGN in the EWS and EDS. The total expected sample of colour-selected AGN contains 6.0×\times106^{6} (74%) unobscured AGN and 2.1×\times106^{6} (26%) obscured AGN, covering 0.02≀zâ‰Č5.20.02 \leq z \lesssim 5.2 and 43≀log⁥10(Lbol/ergs−1)≀4743 \leq \log_{10} (L_{bol} / erg s^{-1}) \leq 47. With this simple colour selection, expected surface densities are already comparable to the yield of modern X-ray and mid-infrared surveys of similar area. The relative uncertainty on our expectation for detectable AGN is 6.7% for the EWS and 12.5% for the EDS, driven by the uncertainty of the XLF

    Euclid. V. The Flagship galaxy mock catalogue: a comprehensive simulation for the Euclid mission

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    International audienceWe present the Flagship galaxy mock, a simulated catalogue of billions of galaxies designed to support the scientific exploitation of the Euclid mission. Euclid is a medium-class mission of the European Space Agency optimised to determine the properties of dark matter and dark energy on the largest scales of the Universe. It probes structure formation over more than 10 billion years primarily from the combination of weak gravitational lensing and galaxy clustering data. The breath of Euclid's data will also foster a wide variety of scientific analyses. The Flagship simulation was developed to provide a realistic approximation to the galaxies that will be observed by Euclid and used in its scientific analyses. We ran a state-of-the-art N-body simulation with four trillion particles, producing a lightcone on the fly. From the dark matter particles, we produced a catalogue of 16 billion haloes in one octant of the sky in the lightcone up to redshift z=3. We then populated these haloes with mock galaxies using a halo occupation distribution and abundance matching approach, calibrating the free parameters of the galaxy mock against observed correlations and other basic galaxy properties. Modelled galaxy properties include luminosity and flux in several bands, redshifts, positions and velocities, spectral energy distributions, shapes and sizes, stellar masses, star formation rates, metallicities, emission line fluxes, and lensing properties. We selected a final sample of 3.4 billion galaxies with a magnitude cut of H_E<26, where we are complete. We have performed a comprehensive set of validation tests to check the similarity to observational data and theoretical models. In particular, our catalogue is able to closely reproduce the main characteristics of the weak lensing and galaxy clustering samples to be used in the mission's main cosmological analysis. (abridged
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