Literature DB >> 32031849

New Estimator for Gravitational Lensing Using Galaxy and Intensity Mapping Surveys.

Mona Jalilvand1, Elisabetta Majerotto1, Camille Bonvin1, Fabien Lacasa1, Martin Kunz1, Warren Naidoo2, Kavilan Moodley2.   

Abstract

We introduce the galaxy intensity mapping cross-correlation estimator (GIMCO), which is a new tomographic estimator for the gravitational lensing potential, based on a combination of intensity mapping (IM) and galaxy number counts. The estimator can be written schematically as IM(z_{f})×galaxy(z_{b})-galaxy(z_{f})×IM(z_{b}) for a pair of distinct redshifts (z_{f},z_{b}); this combination allows to greatly reduce the contamination by density-density correlations, thus isolating the lensing signal. As an estimator constructed only from cross-correlations, it is additionally less susceptible to systematic effects. We show that the new estimator strongly suppresses cosmic variance and consequently improves the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the detection of lensing, especially on linear scales and intermediate redshifts. For cosmic variance dominated surveys, the SNR of our estimator is a factor of 30 larger than the SNR obtained from the correlation of galaxy number counts only. Shot noise and interferometer noise reduce the SNR. For the specific example of the dark energy survey (DES) cross-correlated with the hydrogen intensity mapping and real time analysis experiment (HIRAX), the SNR is around four, whereas for Euclid cross-correlated with HIRAX it reaches 52. This corresponds to an improvement of a factor of 4-5 compared to the SNR from DES alone. For Euclid cross-correlated with HIRAX the improvement with respect to Euclid alone strongly depends on the redshift. We find that the improvement is particularly important for redshifts below 1.6, where it reaches a factor of 5. This makes our estimator especially valuable to test dark energy and modified gravity, that are expected to leave an impact at low and intermediate redshifts.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32031849     DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.031101

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Rev Lett        ISSN: 0031-9007            Impact factor:   9.161


  1 in total

1.  Testing general relativity with cosmological large scale structure.

Authors:  Ruth Durrer
Journal:  Gen Relativ Gravit       Date:  2022-08-18       Impact factor: 2.840

  1 in total

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