ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We present a numerically cheap approximation to super-sample covariance (SSC) of large scale structure cosmological probes, first in the case of angular power spectra. It necessitates no new elements besides those used for the prediction of the considered probes, thus relieving analysis pipelines from having to develop a full SSC modeling, and reducing the computational load. The approximation is asymptotically exact for fine redshift bins $Delta z rightarrow 0$. We furthermore show how it can be implemented at the level of a Gaussian likelihood or a Fisher matrix forecast, as a fast correction to the Gaussian case without needing to build large covariance matrices. Numerical application to a Euclid-like survey show that, compared to a full SSC computation, the approximation recovers nicely the signal-to-noise ratio as well as Fisher forecasts on cosmological parameters of the $w$CDM cosmological model. Moreover it allows for a fast prediction of which parameters are going to be the most affected by SSC and at which level. In the case of photometric galaxy clustering with Euclid-like specifications, we find that $sigma_8$, $n_s$ and the dark energy equation of state $w$ are particularly heavily affected. We finally show how to generalize the approximation for probes other than angular spectra (correlation functions, number counts and bispectra), and at the likelihood level, allowing for the latter to be non-Gaussian if needs be. We release publicly a Python module allowing to implement the SSC approximation, as well as a notebook reproducing the plots of the article, at https://github.com/fabienlacasa/PySSC
The covariance matrix $boldsymbol{Sigma}$ of non-linear clustering statistics that are measured in current and upcoming surveys is of fundamental interest for comparing cosmological theory and data and a crucial ingredient for the likelihood approxim
We give an analytical interpretation of how subsample-based internal covariance estimators lead to biased estimates of the covariance, due to underestimating the super-sample covariance (SSC). This includes the jackknife and bootstrap methods as esti
We present the COmoving Lagrangian Acceleration (COLA) method: an N-body method for solving for Large Scale Structure (LSS) in a frame that is comoving with observers following trajectories calculated in Lagrangian Perturbation Theory (LPT). Unlike s
Photometric galaxy surveys probe the late-time Universe where the density field is highly non-Gaussian. A consequence is the emergence of the super-sample covariance (SSC), a non-Gaussian covariance term that is sensitive to fluctuations on scales la
The usual fluid equations describing the large-scale evolution of mass density in the universe can be written as local in the density, velocity divergence, and velocity potential fields. As a result, the perturbative expansion in small density fluctu