Euclid: Validation of the MontePython forecasting tools
The Euclid mission of the European Space Agency will perform a survey of weak lensing cosmic shear and galaxy clustering in order to constrain cosmological models and fundamental physics. We expand and adjust the mock Euclid likelihoods of the MontePython software in order to match the exact recipes...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Euclid mission of the European Space Agency will perform a survey of weak
lensing cosmic shear and galaxy clustering in order to constrain cosmological
models and fundamental physics. We expand and adjust the mock Euclid
likelihoods of the MontePython software in order to match the exact recipes
used in previous Euclid Fisher matrix forecasts for several probes: weak
lensing cosmic shear, photometric galaxy clustering, the cross-correlation
between the latter observables, and spectroscopic galaxy clustering. We also
establish which precision settings are required when running the
Einstein-Boltzmann solvers CLASS and CAMB in the context of Euclid. For the
minimal cosmological model, extended to include dynamical dark energy, we
perform Fisher matrix forecasts based directly on a numerical evaluation of
second derivatives of the likelihood with respect to model parameters. We
compare our results with those of other forecasting methods and tools. We show
that such MontePython forecasts agree very well with previous Fisher forecasts
published by the Euclid Collaboration, and also, with new forecasts produced by
the CosmicFish code, now interfaced directly with the two Einstein-Boltzmann
solvers CAMB and CLASS. Moreover, to establish the validity of the Gaussian
approximation, we show that the Fisher matrix marginal error contours coincide
with the credible regions obtained when running Monte Carlo Markov Chains with
MontePython while using the exact same mock likelihoods. The new Euclid
forecast pipelines presented here are ready for use with additional
cosmological parameters, in order to explore extended cosmological models. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2303.09451 |