Issue |
A&A
Volume 631, November 2019
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | A160 | |
Number of page(s) | 26 | |
Section | Cosmology (including clusters of galaxies) | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201935912 | |
Published online | 15 November 2019 |
Cosmic shear covariance matrix in wCDM: Cosmology matters
1
Scottish Universities Physics Alliance, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Blackford Hill, UK
e-mail: jharno@roe.ac.uk
2
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
Received:
17
May
2019
Accepted:
17
September
2019
We present here the cosmo-SLICS, a new suite of simulations specially designed for the analysis of current and upcoming weak lensing data beyond the standard two-point cosmic shear. We sampled the [Ωm, σ8, h, w0] parameter space at 25 points organised in a Latin hyper-cube, spanning a range that contains most of the 2σ posterior distribution from ongoing lensing surveys. At each of these nodes we evolved a pair of N-body simulations in which the sampling variance is highly suppressed, and ray-traced the volumes 800 times to further increase the effective sky coverage. We extracted a lensing covariance matrix from these pseudo-independent light-cones and show that it closely matches a brute-force construction based on an ensemble of 800 truly independent N-body runs. More precisely, a Fisher analysis reveals that both methods yield marginalized two-dimensional constraints that vary by less than 6% in area, a result that holds under different survey specifications and that matches to within 15% the area obtained from an analytical covariance calculation. Extending this comparison with our 25 wCDM models, we probed the cosmology dependence of the lensing covariance directly from numerical simulations, reproducing remarkably well the Fisher results from the analytical models at most cosmologies. We demonstrate that varying the cosmology at which the covariance matrix is evaluated in the first place might have an order of magnitude greater impact on the parameter constraints than varying the choice of covariance estimation technique. We present a test case in which we generate fast predictions for both the lensing signal and its associated variance with a flexible Gaussian process regression emulator, achieving an accuracy of a few percent on the former and 10% on the latter.
Key words: gravitational lensing: weak / methods: numerical / dark matter / dark energy / large-scale structure of Universe
© ESO 2019
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