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Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey

We assess the potential of a future large-volume photometric redshift survey to constrain observational inflationary parameters using three large-scale structure observables: the angular shear and galaxy power spectra, and the cluster mass function measured through weak lensing. When used in combina...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Basse, Tobias, Hamann, Jan, Hannestad, Steen, Wong, Yvonne Y.Y.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2015/06/042
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1755338
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author Basse, Tobias
Hamann, Jan
Hannestad, Steen
Wong, Yvonne Y.Y.
author_facet Basse, Tobias
Hamann, Jan
Hannestad, Steen
Wong, Yvonne Y.Y.
author_sort Basse, Tobias
collection CERN
description We assess the potential of a future large-volume photometric redshift survey to constrain observational inflationary parameters using three large-scale structure observables: the angular shear and galaxy power spectra, and the cluster mass function measured through weak lensing. When used in combination with Planck-like CMB measurements, we find that the spectral index n_s can be constrained to a 1 sigma precision of up to 0.0025. The sensitivity to the running of the spectral index can potentially improve to 0.0017, roughly a factor of five better than the present 1 sigma~constraint from Planck and auxiliary CMB data, allowing us to test the assumptions of the slow-roll scenario with unprecedented accuracy. Interestingly, neither CMB+shear nor CMB+galaxy nor CMB+clusters alone can achieve this level of sensitivity; it is the combined power of all three probes that conspires to break the different parameter degeneracies inherent in each type of observations. We make our forecast software publicly available via download or upon request from the authors.
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language eng
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spelling cern-17553382023-10-26T06:45:40Zdoi:10.1088/1475-7516/2015/06/042http://cds.cern.ch/record/1755338engBasse, TobiasHamann, JanHannestad, SteenWong, Yvonne Y.Y.Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift surveyAstrophysics and AstronomyWe assess the potential of a future large-volume photometric redshift survey to constrain observational inflationary parameters using three large-scale structure observables: the angular shear and galaxy power spectra, and the cluster mass function measured through weak lensing. When used in combination with Planck-like CMB measurements, we find that the spectral index n_s can be constrained to a 1 sigma precision of up to 0.0025. The sensitivity to the running of the spectral index can potentially improve to 0.0017, roughly a factor of five better than the present 1 sigma~constraint from Planck and auxiliary CMB data, allowing us to test the assumptions of the slow-roll scenario with unprecedented accuracy. Interestingly, neither CMB+shear nor CMB+galaxy nor CMB+clusters alone can achieve this level of sensitivity; it is the combined power of all three probes that conspires to break the different parameter degeneracies inherent in each type of observations. We make our forecast software publicly available via download or upon request from the authors.We assess the potential of a future large-volume photometric redshift survey to constrain observational inflationary parameters using three large-scale structure observables: the angular shear and galaxy power spectra, and the cluster mass function measured through weak lensing. When used in combination with Planck-like CMB measurements, we find that the spectral index n(s) can be constrained to a 1 σ precision of up to 0.0025. The sensitivity to the running of the spectral index can potentially improve to 0.0017, roughly a factor of five better than the present 1σ constraint from Planck and auxiliary CMB data, allowing us to test the assumptions of the slow-roll scenario with unprecedented accuracy. Interestingly, neither CMB+shear nor CMB+galaxy nor CMB+clusters alone can achieve this level of sensitivity, it is the combined power of all three probes that conspires to break the different parameter degeneracies inherent in each type of observations. We make our forecast software publicly available via download or upon request from the authors.We assess the potential of a future large-volume photometric redshift survey to constrain observational inflationary parameters using three large-scale structure observables: the angular shear and galaxy power spectra, and the cluster mass function measured through weak lensing. When used in combination with Planck-like CMB measurements, we find that the spectral index n_s can be constrained to a 1 sigma precision of up to 0.0025. The sensitivity to the running of the spectral index can potentially improve to 0.0017, roughly a factor of five better than the present 1 sigma~constraint from Planck and auxiliary CMB data, allowing us to test the assumptions of the slow-roll scenario with unprecedented accuracy. Interestingly, neither CMB+shear nor CMB+galaxy nor CMB+clusters alone can achieve this level of sensitivity; it is the combined power of all three probes that conspires to break the different parameter degeneracies inherent in each type of observations. We make our forecast software publicly available via download or upon request from the authors.arXiv:1409.3469oai:cds.cern.ch:17553382014-09-11
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Basse, Tobias
Hamann, Jan
Hannestad, Steen
Wong, Yvonne Y.Y.
Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title_full Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title_fullStr Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title_full_unstemmed Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title_short Getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
title_sort getting leverage on inflation with a large photometric redshift survey
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2015/06/042
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1755338
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