4.6 Article

Magnification bias as a novel probe for primordial magnetic fields

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2014/03/027

Keywords

primordial magnetic fields; galaxy clustering; cosmological parameters from LSS; weak gravitational lensing

Funding

  1. FCT-Portugal [SFRH/BPD/80274/2011]
  2. University of Florida through the Theoretical Astrophysics Fellowship
  3. European Commission Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013, 267251]
  4. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BPD/80274/2011] Funding Source: FCT

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In this paper we investigate magnetic fields generated in the early Universe. These fields are important candidates at explaining the origin of astrophysical magnetism observed in galaxies and galaxy clusters, whose genesis is still by and large unclear. Compared to the standard inflationary power spectrum, intermediate to small scales would experience further substantial matter clustering, were a cosmological magnetic field present prior to recombination. As a consequence, the bias and redshift distribution of galaxies would also be modified. Hitherto, primordial magnetic fields (PMFs) have been tested and constrained with a number of cosmological observables, e. g. the cosmic microwave background radiation, galaxy clustering and, more recently, weak gravitational lensing. Here, we explore the constraining potential of the density fluctuation bias induced by gravitational lensing magnification onto the galaxy-galaxy angular power spectrum. Such an effect is known as magnification bias. Compared to the usual galaxy clustering approach, magnification bias helps in lifting the pathological degeneracy present amongst power spectrum normalisation and galaxy bias. This is because magnification bias cross-correlates galaxy number density fluctuations of nearby objects with weak lensing distortions of high-redshift sources. Thus, it takes advantage of the gravitational deflection of light, which is insensitive to galaxy bias but powerful in constraining the density fluctuation amplitude. To scrutinise the potentiality of this method, we adopt a deep and wide-field spectroscopic galaxy survey. We show that magnification bias does contain important information on primordial magnetism, which will be useful in combination with galaxy clustering and shear. We find we shall be able to rule out at 95.4% CL amplitudes of PMFs larger than 5 x 10(-4) nG for values of the PMF power spectral index n(B) similar to 0.

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