Dependence of cosmic shear covariances on cosmology Impact on parameter estimation

被引:99
作者
Eifler, T. [1 ]
Schneider, P. [1 ]
Hartlap, J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bonn, Argelander Inst Astron, D-53121 Bonn, Germany
关键词
cosmology: large-scale structure of the Universe; methods: statistical; cosmology: theory; cosmology: cosmological parameters; WEAK LENSING SURVEYS; 2-POINT STATISTICS; GALAXIES; REGIME; MODEL; WIDE;
D O I
10.1051/0004-6361/200811276
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Context. In cosmic shear likelihood analyses, the covariance is most commonly assumed to be constant in parameter space. Therefore, when calculating the covariance matrix (analytically or from simulations), its underlying cosmology should not influence the likelihood contours. Aims. We examine whether the aforementioned assumptions hold and quantify how strong cosmic shear covariances vary within a reasonable parameter range. Furthermore, we examine the impact on likelihood contours when assuming different cosmologies in the covariance. The final goal is to develop an improved likelihood analysis for parameter estimation with cosmic shear. Methods. We calculate Gaussian covariances analytically for 2500 different cosmologies. To quantify the impact on the parameter constraints, we perform a likelihood analysis for each covariance matrix and compare the likelihood contours. To improve on the assumption of a constant covariance, we use an adaptive covariance matrix, which is continuously updated according to the point in parameter space where the likelihood is evaluated. As a side-effect, this cosmology-dependent covariance improves the parameter constraints. We examine this more closely using the Fisher-matrix formalism. In addition, we quantify the impact of non-Gaussian covariances on the likelihood contours using a ray-tracing covariance derived from the Millennium simulation. In this ansatz, we return to the approximation of a cosmology-independent covariance matrix, and to minimize the error due to this approximation, we develop the concept of an iterative likelihood analysis. Results. Covariances vary significantly within the considered parameter range. The cosmology assumed in the covariance has a non-negligible impact on the size of the likelihood contours. This impact increases with increasing survey size, increasing number density of source galaxies, decreasing ellipticity noise, and when taking non-Gaussianity into account. A proper treatment of this effect is therefore even more important for future surveys. In this paper, we present methods for taking cosmology-dependent covariances into account.
引用
收藏
页码:721 / 731
页数:11
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] ANDERSON TW, 2003, INTRO MULTIVARIATE S, P623
  • [2] [Anonymous], 1979, ADV THEORY STAT
  • [3] Detection of weak gravitational lensing by large-scale structure
    Bacon, DJ
    Refregier, AR
    Ellis, RS
    [J]. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2000, 318 (02) : 625 - 640
  • [4] Weak gravitational lensing
    Bartelmann, M
    Schneider, P
    [J]. PHYSICS REPORTS-REVIEW SECTION OF PHYSICS LETTERS, 2001, 340 (4-5): : 291 - 472
  • [5] EFSTATHIOU G, 1992, MON NOT R ASTRON SOC, V258, P1
  • [6] EIFLER T, 2009, THESIS U BONN
  • [7] Very weak lensing in the CFHTLS wide:: cosmology from cosmic shear in the linear regime
    Fu, L.
    Semboloni, E.
    Hoekstra, H.
    Kilbinger, M.
    van Waerbeke, L.
    Tereno, I.
    Mellier, Y.
    Heymans, C.
    Coupon, J.
    Benabed, K.
    Benjamin, J.
    Bertin, E.
    Dore, O.
    Hudson, M. J.
    Ilbert, O.
    Maoli, R.
    Marmo, C.
    McCracken, H. J.
    Menard, B.
    [J]. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2008, 479 (01) : 9 - U38
  • [8] Why your model parameter confidences might be too optimistic. Unbiased estimation of the inverse covariance matrix
    Hartlap, J.
    Simon, P.
    Schneider, P.
    [J]. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2007, 464 (01) : 399 - 404
  • [9] GaBoDS: The Garching-Bonn deep survey - VII. Cosmic shear analysis
    Hetterscheidt, M.
    Simon, P.
    Schirmer, M.
    Hildebrandt, H.
    Schrabback, T.
    Erben, T.
    Schneider, P.
    [J]. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2007, 468 (03) : 859 - U35
  • [10] HILBERT S, 2008, ARXIV08095035H