4.6 Article

Euclid preparation XII. Optimizing the photometric sample of the Euclid survey for galaxy clustering and galaxy-galaxy lensing analyses

期刊

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
卷 655, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202141061

关键词

galaxies; distances and redshifts; techniques; photometric; cosmological parameters; surveys

资金

  1. Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Empresa i Coneixement de la Generalitat de Catalunya
  2. European FEDER/ERF funds, L'FSE inverteix en el teu futur
  3. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [ESP2017-89838]
  4. H2020 programme of the European Commission [776247]
  5. 'Departments of Excellence 2018-2022' Grant - Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) [L. 232/2016]
  6. MIUR through Rita Levi Montalcini project 'PROMETHEUS - Probing and Relating Observables with Multi-wavelength Experiments To Help Enlightening the Universe's Structure'
  7. UK Research and Innovation [MR/S016066/1]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Photometric redshifts are crucial for cosmological studies, affecting galaxy clustering and weak lensing analyses. The accuracy of photometric measurements from future space missions like Euclid must be complemented by ground-based observations. By exploring factors such as redshift binning, survey depth, and photo-z accuracy, we find that certain strategies, such as using equal width redshift bins and increasing the number of bins, can significantly improve the cosmological Figure of Merit (FoM), particularly for galaxy clustering.
Photometric redshifts (photo-zs) are one of the main ingredients in the analysis of cosmological probes. Their accuracy particularly affects the results of the analyses of galaxy clustering with photometrically selected galaxies (GC(ph)) and weak lensing. In the next decade, space missions such as Euclid will collect precise and accurate photometric measurements for millions of galaxies. These data should be complemented with upcoming ground-based observations to derive precise and accurate photo-zs. In this article we explore how the tomographic redshift binning and depth of ground-based observations will affect the cosmological constraints expected from the Euclid mission. We focus on GC(ph) and extend the study to include galaxy-galaxy lensing (GGL). We add a layer of complexity to the analysis by simulating several realistic photo-z distributions based on the Euclid Consortium Flagship simulation and using a machine learning photo-z algorithm. We then use the Fisher matrix formalism together with these galaxy samples to study the cosmological constraining power as a function of redshift binning, survey depth, and photo-z accuracy. We find that bins with an equal width in redshift provide a higher figure of merit (FoM) than equipopulated bins and that increasing the number of redshift bins from ten to 13 improves the FoM by 35% and 15% for GC(ph) and its combination with GGL, respectively. For GC(ph), an increase in the survey depth provides a higher FoM. However, when we include faint galaxies beyond the limit of the spectroscopic training data, the resulting FoM decreases because of the spurious photo-zs. When combining GC(ph) and GGL, the number density of the sample, which is set by the survey depth, is the main factor driving the variations in the FoM. Adding galaxies at faint magnitudes and high redshift increases the FoM, even when they are beyond the spectroscopic limit, since the number density increase compensates for the photo-z degradation in this case. We conclude that there is more information that can be extracted beyond the nominal ten tomographic redshift bins of Euclid and that we should be cautious when adding faint galaxies into our sample since they can degrade the cosmological constraints.

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