3D cosmic shear: numerical challenges, 3D lensing random fields generation and Minkowski Functionals for cosmological inference
Phys. Rev. D 98, 103507 (2018) Cosmic shear - the weak gravitational lensing effect generated by fluctuations of the gravitational tidal fields of the large-scale structure - is one of the most promising tools for current and future cosmological analyses. The spherical-Bessel decomposition of the co...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
12-11-2018
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Phys. Rev. D 98, 103507 (2018) Cosmic shear - the weak gravitational lensing effect generated by
fluctuations of the gravitational tidal fields of the large-scale structure -
is one of the most promising tools for current and future cosmological
analyses. The spherical-Bessel decomposition of the cosmic shear field ("3D
cosmic shear") is one way to maximise the amount of redshift information in a
lensing analysis and therefore provides a powerful tool to investigate in
particular the growth of cosmic structure that is crucial for dark energy
studies. However, the computation of simulated 3D cosmic shear covariance
matrices presents numerical difficulties, due to the required integrations over
highly oscillatory functions. We present and compare two numerical methods and
relative implementations to perform these integrations. We then show how to
generate 3D Gaussian random fields on the sky in spherical coordinates,
starting from the 3D cosmic shear covariances. To validate our field-generation
procedure, we calculate the Minkowski functionals associated with our random
fields, compare them with the known expectation values for the Gaussian case
and demonstrate parameter inference from Minkowski functionals from a cosmic
shear survey. This is a first step towards producing fully 3D Minkowski
functionals for a lognormal field in 3D to extract Gaussian and non-Gaussian
information from the cosmic shear field, as well as towards the use of
Minkowski functionals as a probe of cosmology beyond the commonly used
two-point statistics. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1807.11461 |