The abundance of clusters and the clustering of galaxies are two of the
important cosmological probes for current and future large scale surveys of
galaxies, such as the Dark Energy Survey. In order to combine them one has to
account for the fact that they are not independent quantities, since they probe
the same density field. It is important to develop a good understanding of
their correlation in order to extract parameter constraints. We present a
detailed modelling of the joint covariance matrix between cluster number counts
and the galaxy angular power spectrum. We employ the framework of the halo
model complemented by a Halo Occupation Distribution model (HOD). We
demonstrate the importance of accounting for non-Gaussianity to produce
accurate covariance predictions. Indeed, we show that the non-Gaussian
covariance becomes dominant at small scales, low redshifts or high cluster
masses. We discuss in particular the case of the super-sample covariance (SSC),
including the effects of galaxy shot-noise, halo second order bias and
non-local bias. We demonstrate that the SSC obeys mathematical inequalities and
positivity. Using the joint covariance matrix and a Fisher matrix methodology,
we examine the prospects of combining these two probes to constrain
cosmological and HOD parameters. We find that the combination indeed results in
noticeably better constraints, with improvements of order 20\% on cosmological
parameters compared to the best single probe, and even greater improvement on
HOD parameters, with reduction of error bars by a factor 1.4-4.8. This happens
in particular because the cross-covariance introduces a synergy between the
probes on small scales. We conclude that accounting for non-Gaussian effects is
required for the joint analysis of these observables in galaxy surveys.Comment: 40 pages, 12 figures. Minor modifications, references adde