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arxiv: 1805.11629 · v2 · pith:HS7URBY6new · submitted 2018-05-29 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO

Covariances for cosmic shear and galaxy-galaxy lensing in the response approach

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO
keywords responsesimulationscovariancelarge-scalespectraapproachcalibratecontrast
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In this study, we measure the response of matter and halo projected power spectra $P^{\rm 2D}_{\rm XY}(k)$ (X, Y are matter and/or halos), to a large-scale density contrast, $\delta_{\rm b}$, using separate universe simulations. We show that the fractional response functions, i.e., $\mathrm{d}\ln P^{\rm 2D}_{\rm XY}(k)/\mathrm{d}\delta_{\rm b}$, are identical to their respective three-dimensional power spectra within simulation measurement errors. Then, using various $N$-body simulation combinations (small-box simulations with periodic boundary conditions and sub-volumes of large-box simulations) to construct {mock observations of projected fields}, we study how super-survey modes, in both parallel and perpendicular directions to the projection direction, affect the covariance matrix of $P^{\rm 2D}_{\rm XY}(k)$, known as super-sample covariance (SSC). Our results indicate that the SSC term provides dominant contributions to the covariances of matter-matter and matter-halo spectra at small scales but does not provide significant contributions in the halo-halo spectrum. We observe that the large-scale density contrast in each redshift shell causes most of the SSC effect, and we did not observe a SSC signature arising from large-scale tidal field within the levels of measurement accuracy. We also develop a response approach to calibrate the SSC term for cosmic shear correlation function and galaxy--galaxy weak lensing, and validate the method by comparison with the light-cone ray-tracing simulations. Our method provides a reasonably accurate, albeit computationally inexpensive, way to calibrate the covariance matrix for clustering observables available from wide-area galaxy surveys.

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