Natalí S.M. de Santi, Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro, L. Raul Abramo, Helen Shao, Lucia A. Perez, Tiago Castro, Yueying Ni, Christopher C. Lovell, Elena Hernández-Martínez, Federico Marinacci, David N. Spergel, Klaus Dolag, Lars Hernquist and Mark Vogelsberger
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Field-level simulation-based inference with galaxy catalogs: the impact of systematic effects
It has been recently shown that a powerful way to constrain cosmological parameters from galaxy redshift surveys is to train graph neural networks to perform field-level likelihood-free inference without imposing cuts on scale. In particular, de Santi et al. [58] developed models that could accurately infer the value of Ωm from catalogs that only contain the positions and radial velocities of galaxies that are robust to different astrophysics and subgrid models. However, observations are affected by many effects, including (1) masking, (2) uncertainties in peculiar velocities and radial distances, and (3) different galaxy population selections. Moreover, observations only allow us to measure redshift, which entangles the galaxy radial positions and velocities. In this paper we train and test our models on galaxy catalogs, created from thousands of state-of-the-art hydrodynamic simulations run with different codes from the CAMELS project, that incorporate these observational effects. We find that while such effects degrade the precision and accuracy of the models, the fraction of galaxy catalogs for which the models retain high performance and robustness is over 90%, demonstrating the potential for applying them to real data.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics (JCAP) encompasses theoretical, observational and experimental areas as well as computation and simulation. The journal covers the latest developments in the theory of all fundamental interactions and their cosmological implications (e.g. M-theory and cosmology, brane cosmology). JCAP''s coverage also includes topics such as formation, dynamics and clustering of galaxies, pre-galactic star formation, x-ray astronomy, radio astronomy, gravitational lensing, active galactic nuclei, intergalactic and interstellar matter.