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The impact of relativistic effects on cosmological parameter estimation

Abstract:
Future surveys will access large volumes of space and hence very long wavelength fluctuations of the matter density and gravitational field. It has been argued that the set of secondary effects that affect the galaxy distribution, relativistic in nature, will bring new, complementary cosmological constraints. We study this claim in detail by focusing on a subset of wide-area future surveys: Stage-4 cosmic microwave background experiments and photometric redshift surveys. In particular, we look at the magnification lensing contribution to galaxy clustering and general relativistic corrections to all observables. We quantify the amount of information encoded in these effects in terms of the tightening of the final cosmological constraints as well as the potential bias in inferred parameters associated with neglecting them. We do so for a wide range of cosmological parameters, covering neutrino masses, standard dark-energy parametrizations and scalar-tensor gravity theories. Our results show that, while the effect of lensing magnification to number counts does not contain a significant amount of information when galaxy clustering is combined with cosmic shear measurements, this contribution does play a significant role in biasing estimates on a host of parameter families if unaccounted for. Since the amplitude of the magnification term is controlled by the slope of the source number counts with apparent magnitude, $s(z)$, we also estimate the accuracy to which this quantity must be known to avoid systematic parameter biases, finding that future surveys will need to determine $s(z)$ to the $\sim$5-10\% level. On the contrary, large-scale general-relativistic corrections are irrelevant both in terms of information content and parameter bias for most cosmological parameters, but significant for the level of primordial non-Gaussianity.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1103/PhysRevD.97.023537

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS Division
Department:
Physics; Astrophysics
Role:
Author
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Physics
Sub department:
Astrophysics
Role:
Author
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS Division
Department:
Physics; Astrophysics
Oxford college:
Oriel College
Role:
Author


More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Ferreira, P
Grant:
693024
More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Alonso, D
Ferreira, P
Grant:
693024
More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Ferreira, P
Grant:
693024
More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Alonso, D
Ferreira, P
Grant:
693024


Publisher:
American Physical Society
Journal:
Physical Review D More from this journal
Volume:
97
Issue:
2
Pages:
1-14
Publication date:
2018-01-29
Acceptance date:
2017-12-27
DOI:
ISSN:
0556-2821


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:738108
UUID:
uuid:95e6671a-1235-447e-85e0-90e5372469a4
Local pid:
pubs:738108
Source identifiers:
738108
Deposit date:
2018-02-13

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