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Advances in upcoming weak lensing surveys pose new challenges for an accurate modeling of the lensing observables. With their large sky coverage, common approximations based on a flat-sky geometry cannot be used anymore to evaluate all measurable angular scales. Moreover, additional relativistic effects manifest themselves on large scales and thus need to be accounted for. In particular, the lensing magnification cannot be correctly described by the standard lensing convergence only. We present the analytical solutions for the fully-relativistic weak lensing angular power spectra, including the contribution from primordial gravitational waves. We compare the results obtained by using the Limber approximation with the precise all-sky calculations using spherical harmonics. Our numerical evaluations show that general relativistic corrections are one order-of-magnitude below cosmic variance at small scales ($lgeq 10$). At large scales ($l<10$), however, neglecting them leads to more significant errors, especially when combined with the Limber approximation. Hence, a precise, fully-relativistic modeling is necessary at these largest scales.
Angular two-point statistics of large-scale structure observables are important cosmological probes. To reach the high accuracy required by the statistical precision of future surveys, some of these statistics may need to be computed without the comm
Future galaxy clustering surveys will probe small scales where non-linearities become important. Since the number of modes accessible on intermediate to small scales is very high, having a precise model at these scales is important especially in the
The study of relativistic, higher order and nonlinear effects has become necessary in recent years in the pursuit of precision cosmology. We develop and apply here a framework to study gravitational lensing in exact models in general relativity that
We present initial results from the Jubilee ISW project, which models the expected LambdaCDM Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect in the Jubilee simulation. The simulation volume is (6 Gpc/h)^3, allowing power on very large-scales to be incorporated i
We examine general physical parameterisations for viable gravitational models in the $f(R)$ framework. This is related to the mass of an additional scalar field, called the scalaron, that is introduced by the theories. Using a simple parameterisation