135 research outputs found
Euclid preparation. XXIV. Calibration of the halo mass function in CDM cosmologies
Euclid's photometric galaxy cluster survey has the potential to be a very
competitive cosmological probe. The main cosmological probe with observations
of clusters is their number count, within which the halo mass function (HMF) is
a key theoretical quantity. We present a new calibration of the analytic HMF,
at the level of accuracy and precision required for the uncertainty in this
quantity to be subdominant with respect to other sources of uncertainty in
recovering cosmological parameters from Euclid cluster counts. Our model is
calibrated against a suite of N-body simulations using a Bayesian approach
taking into account systematic errors arising from numerical effects in the
simulation. First, we test the convergence of HMF predictions from different
N-body codes, by using initial conditions generated with different orders of
Lagrangian Perturbation theory, and adopting different simulation box sizes and
mass resolution. Then, we quantify the effect of using different halo-finder
algorithms, and how the resulting differences propagate to the cosmological
constraints. In order to trace the violation of universality in the HMF, we
also analyse simulations based on initial conditions characterised by
scale-free power spectra with different spectral indexes, assuming both
Einstein--de Sitter and standard CDM expansion histories. Based on
these results, we construct a fitting function for the HMF that we demonstrate
to be sub-percent accurate in reproducing results from 9 different variants of
the CDM model including massive neutrinos cosmologies. The calibration
systematic uncertainty is largely sub-dominant with respect to the expected
precision of future mass-observation relations; with the only notable exception
of the effect due to the halo finder, that could lead to biased cosmological
inference.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figures, 5 tables, 3 appendixes
Euclid preparation. TBD. The effect of linear redshift-space distortions in photometric galaxy clustering and its cross-correlation with cosmic shear
Cosmological surveys planned for the current decade will provide us with
unparalleled observations of the distribution of galaxies on cosmic scales, by
means of which we can probe the underlying large-scale structure (LSS) of the
Universe. This will allow us to test the concordance cosmological model and its
extensions. However, precision pushes us to high levels of accuracy in the
theoretical modelling of the LSS observables, in order not to introduce biases
in the estimation of cosmological parameters. In particular, effects such as
redshift-space distortions (RSD) can become relevant in the computation of
harmonic-space power spectra even for the clustering of the photometrically
selected galaxies, as it has been previously shown in literature studies. In
this work, we investigate the contribution of linear RSD, as formulated in the
Limber approximation by arXiv:1902.07226, in forecast cosmological analyses
with the photometric galaxy sample of the Euclid survey, in order to assess
their impact and quantify the bias on the measurement of cosmological
parameters that neglecting such an effect would cause. We perform this task by
producing mock power spectra for photometric galaxy clustering and weak
lensing, as expected to be obtained from the Euclid survey. We then use a
Markov chain Monte Carlo approach to obtain the posterior distributions of
cosmological parameters from such simulated observations. We find that
neglecting the linear RSD leads to significant biases both when using galaxy
correlations alone and when these are combined with cosmic shear, in the
so-called 32pt approach. Such biases can be as large as
-equivalent when assuming an underlying CDM cosmology. When
extending the cosmological model to include the equation-of-state parameters of
dark energy, we find that the extension parameters can be shifted by more than
.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. To be submitted in A&
Euclid Preparation. XXVIII. Forecasts for ten different higher-order weak lensing statistics
Recent cosmic shear studies have shown that higher-order statistics (HOS)
developed by independent teams now outperform standard two-point estimators in
terms of statistical precision thanks to their sensitivity to the non-Gaussian
features of large-scale structure. The aim of the Higher-Order Weak Lensing
Statistics (HOWLS) project is to assess, compare, and combine the constraining
power of ten different HOS on a common set of -like mocks, derived from
N-body simulations. In this first paper of the HOWLS series, we computed the
nontomographic (, ) Fisher information for the
one-point probability distribution function, peak counts, Minkowski
functionals, Betti numbers, persistent homology Betti numbers and heatmap, and
scattering transform coefficients, and we compare them to the shear and
convergence two-point correlation functions in the absence of any systematic
bias. We also include forecasts for three implementations of higher-order
moments, but these cannot be robustly interpreted as the Gaussian likelihood
assumption breaks down for these statistics. Taken individually, we find that
each HOS outperforms the two-point statistics by a factor of around two in the
precision of the forecasts with some variations across statistics and
cosmological parameters. When combining all the HOS, this increases to a
times improvement, highlighting the immense potential of HOS for cosmic shear
cosmological analyses with . The data used in this analysis are
publicly released with the paper.Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures, main results in Fig. 19 & Table 5, version
published in A&
Euclid preparation XXVIII. Forecasts for ten different higher-order weak lensing statistics
Recent cosmic shear studies have shown that higher-order statistics (HOS) developed by independent teams now outperform standard two-point estimators in terms of statistical precision thanks to their sensitivity to the non-Gaussian features of large-scale structure. The aim of the Higher-Order Weak Lensing Statistics (HOWLS) project is to assess, compare, and combine the constraining power of ten different HOS on a common set of Euclid-like mocks, derived from N-body simulations. In this first paper of the HOWLS series, we computed the nontomographic (Ωm, Ï8) Fisher information for the one-point probability distribution function, peak counts, Minkowski functionals, Betti numbers, persistent homology Betti numbers and heatmap, and scattering transform coefficients, and we compare them to the shear and convergence two-point correlation functions in the absence of any systematic bias. We also include forecasts for three implementations of higher-order moments, but these cannot be robustly interpreted as the Gaussian likelihood assumption breaks down for these statistics. Taken individually, we find that each HOS outperforms the two-point statistics by a factor of around two in the precision of the forecasts with some variations across statistics and cosmological parameters. When combining all the HOS, this increases to a 4.5 times improvement, highlighting the immense potential of HOS for cosmic shear cosmological analyses with Euclid. The data used in this analysis are publicly released with the paper
Euclid preparation. XXIX. Water ice in spacecraft part I: The physics of ice formation and contamination
Molecular contamination is a well-known problem in space flight. Water is the
most common contaminant and alters numerous properties of a cryogenic optical
system. Too much ice means that Euclid's calibration requirements and science
goals cannot be met. Euclid must then be thermally decontaminated, a long and
risky process. We need to understand how iced optics affect the data and when a
decontamination is required. This is essential to build adequate calibration
and survey plans, yet a comprehensive analysis in the context of an
astrophysical space survey has not been done before.
In this paper we look at other spacecraft with well-documented outgassing
records, and we review the formation of thin ice films. A mix of amorphous and
crystalline ices is expected for Euclid. Their surface topography depends on
the competing energetic needs of the substrate-water and the water-water
interfaces, and is hard to predict with current theories. We illustrate that
with scanning-tunnelling and atomic-force microscope images.
Industrial tools exist to estimate contamination, and we must understand
their uncertainties. We find considerable knowledge errors on the diffusion and
sublimation coefficients, limiting the accuracy of these tools. We developed a
water transport model to compute contamination rates in Euclid, and find
general agreement with industry estimates. Tests of the Euclid flight hardware
in space simulators did not pick up contamination signals; our in-flight
calibrations observations will be much more sensitive.
We must understand the link between the amount of ice on the optics and its
effect on Euclid's data. Little research is available about this link, possibly
because other spacecraft can decontaminate easily, quenching the need for a
deeper understanding. In our second paper we quantify the various effects of
iced optics on spectrophotometric data.Comment: 35 pages, 22 figures, A&A in press. Changes to previous version:
language edits, added Z. Bolag as author in the arxiv PDF (was listed in the
ASCII author list and in the journal PDF, but not in the arxiv PDF). This
version is identical to the journal versio
Euclid preparation. XXXI. The effect of the variations in photometric passbands on photometric-redshift accuracy
The technique of photometric redshifts has become essential for the
exploitation of multi-band extragalactic surveys. While the requirements on
photo-zs for the study of galaxy evolution mostly pertain to the precision and
to the fraction of outliers, the most stringent requirement in their use in
cosmology is on the accuracy, with a level of bias at the sub-percent level for
the Euclid cosmology mission. A separate, and challenging, calibration process
is needed to control the bias at this level of accuracy. The bias in photo-zs
has several distinct origins that may not always be easily overcome. We
identify here one source of bias linked to the spatial or time variability of
the passbands used to determine the photometric colours of galaxies. We first
quantified the effect as observed on several well-known photometric cameras,
and found in particular that, due to the properties of optical filters, the
redshifts of off-axis sources are usually overestimated. We show using simple
simulations that the detailed and complex changes in the shape can be mostly
ignored and that it is sufficient to know the mean wavelength of the passbands
of each photometric observation to correct almost exactly for this bias; the
key point is that this mean wavelength is independent of the spectral energy
distribution of the source}. We use this property to propose a correction that
can be computationally efficiently implemented in some photo-z algorithms, in
particular template-fitting. We verified that our algorithm, implemented in the
new photo-z code Phosphoros, can effectively reduce the bias in photo-zs on
real data using the CFHTLS T007 survey, with an average measured bias Delta z
over the redshift range 0.4<z<0.7 decreasing by about 0.02, specifically from
Delta z~0.04 to Delta z~0.02 around z=0.5. Our algorithm is also able to
produce corrected photometry for other applications.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures; Accepted for publication in A&
Euclid preparation. XXV. The Euclid Morphology Challenge -- Towards model-fitting photometry for billions of galaxies
The ESA Euclid mission will provide high-quality imaging for about 1.5
billion galaxies. A software pipeline to automatically process and analyse such
a huge amount of data in real time is being developed by the Science Ground
Segment of the Euclid Consortium; this pipeline will include a model-fitting
algorithm, which will provide photometric and morphological estimates of
paramount importance for the core science goals of the mission and for legacy
science. The Euclid Morphology Challenge is a comparative investigation of the
performance of five model-fitting software packages on simulated Euclid data,
aimed at providing the baseline to identify the best suited algorithm to be
implemented in the pipeline. In this paper we describe the simulated data set,
and we discuss the photometry results. A companion paper (Euclid Collaboration:
Bretonni\`ere et al. 2022) is focused on the structural and morphological
estimates. We created mock Euclid images simulating five fields of view of 0.48
deg2 each in the band of the VIS instrument, each with three realisations
of galaxy profiles (single and double S\'ersic, and 'realistic' profiles
obtained with a neural network); for one of the fields in the double S\'ersic
realisation, we also simulated images for the three near-infrared ,
and bands of the NISP-P instrument, and five Rubin/LSST optical
complementary bands (, , , , and ). To analyse the results we
created diagnostic plots and defined ad-hoc metrics. Five model-fitting
software packages (DeepLeGATo, Galapagos-2, Morfometryka, ProFit, and
SourceXtractor++) were compared, all typically providing good results. (cut)Comment: 29 pages, 33 figures. Euclid pre-launch key paper. Companion paper:
Bretonniere et al. 202
Euclid preparation TBD. The effect of baryons on the Halo Mass Function
The Euclid photometric survey of galaxy clusters stands as a powerful
cosmological tool, with the capacity to significantly propel our understanding
of the Universe. Despite being sub-dominant to dark matter and dark energy, the
baryonic component in our Universe holds substantial influence over the
structure and mass of galaxy clusters. This paper presents a novel model to
precisely quantify the impact of baryons on galaxy cluster virial halo masses,
using the baryon fraction within a cluster as proxy for their effect.
Constructed on the premise of quasi-adiabaticity, the model includes two
parameters calibrated using non-radiative cosmological hydrodynamical
simulations and a single large-scale simulation from the Magneticum set, which
includes the physical processes driving galaxy formation. As a main result of
our analysis, we demonstrate that this model delivers a remarkable one percent
relative accuracy in determining the virial dark matter-only equivalent mass of
galaxy clusters, starting from the corresponding total cluster mass and baryon
fraction measured in hydrodynamical simulations. Furthermore, we demonstrate
that this result is robust against changes in cosmological parameters and
against varying the numerical implementation of the sub-resolution physical
processes included in the simulations. Our work substantiates previous claims
about the impact of baryons on cluster cosmology studies. In particular, we
show how neglecting these effects would lead to biased cosmological constraints
for a Euclid-like cluster abundance analysis. Importantly, we demonstrate that
uncertainties associated with our model, arising from baryonic corrections to
cluster masses, are sub-dominant when compared to the precision with which
mass-observable relations will be calibrated using Euclid, as well as our
current understanding of the baryon fraction within galaxy clusters.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables, 1 appendix, abstract abridged for
arXiv submissio
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