scholarly journals THE MATTER POWER SPECTRUM AS A TOOL TO DISCRIMINATE DARK MATTER-DARK ENERGY INTERACTIONS

Author(s):  
GERMÁN OLIVARES ◽  
DIEGO PAVÓN ◽  
FERNANDO ATRIO-BARANDELA
2020 ◽  
Vol 240 ◽  
pp. 02003
Author(s):  
Fargiza A. M. Mulki ◽  
Hesti Wulandari

In this paper, we reconstruct matter power spectrum of a cosmological model in which coupled scalar field acts as dark energy. The coupled scalar field (CSF) dark energy we propose here is a generalized model of quintessence, k-essence or phantom coupled to dark matter (non-baryonic matter) via a coupling constant. The existence of coupling between dark energy and matter allows energy to transfer between them, which may give rise to different observational signatures, especially at perturbation level, including matter power spectrum. In this work, through analytical exploration we studied that possible signature in matter power spectrum that maybe induced by this mode.


2020 ◽  
Vol 500 (2) ◽  
pp. 2532-2542
Author(s):  
Linda Blot ◽  
Pier-Stefano Corasaniti ◽  
Yann Rasera ◽  
Shankar Agarwal

ABSTRACT Future galaxy surveys will provide accurate measurements of the matter power spectrum across an unprecedented range of scales and redshifts. The analysis of these data will require one to accurately model the imprint of non-linearities of the matter density field. In particular, these induce a non-Gaussian contribution to the data covariance that needs to be properly taken into account to realize unbiased cosmological parameter inference analyses. Here, we study the cosmological dependence of the matter power spectrum covariance using a dedicated suite of N-body simulations, the Dark Energy Universe Simulation–Parallel Universe Runs (DEUS-PUR) Cosmo. These consist of 512 realizations for 10 different cosmologies where we vary the matter density Ωm, the amplitude of density fluctuations σ8, the reduced Hubble parameter h, and a constant dark energy equation of state w by approximately $10{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$. We use these data to evaluate the first and second derivatives of the power spectrum covariance with respect to a fiducial Λ-cold dark matter cosmology. We find that the variations can be as large as $150{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ depending on the scale, redshift, and model parameter considered. By performing a Fisher matrix analysis we explore the impact of different choices in modelling the cosmological dependence of the covariance. Our results suggest that fixing the covariance to a fiducial cosmology can significantly affect the recovered parameter errors and that modelling the cosmological dependence of the variance while keeping the correlation coefficient fixed can alleviate the impact of this effect.


2019 ◽  
Vol 485 (4) ◽  
pp. 5474-5489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark R Lovell ◽  
Jesús Zavala ◽  
Mark Vogelsberger

Abstract A cut-off in the linear matter power spectrum at dwarf galaxy scales has been shown to affect the abundance, formation mechanism and age of dwarf haloes, and their galaxies at high and low redshifts. We use hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation within the ETHOS framework in a benchmark model that has such a cut-off and that has been shown to be an alternative to the cold dark matter (CDM) model that alleviates its dwarf-scale challenges. We show how galaxies in this model form differently to CDM, on a halo-by-halo basis, at redshifts z ≥ 6. We show that when CDM haloes with masses around the ETHOS half-mode mass scale are resimulated with the ETHOS matter power spectrum, they form with 50 per cent less mass than their CDM counterparts due to their later formation times, yet they retain more of their gas reservoir due to the different behaviour of gas and dark matter during the monolithic collapse of the first haloes in models with a galactic-scale cut-off. As a result, galaxies in ETHOS haloes near the cut-off scale grow rapidly between z = 10 and 6 and by z = 6 end up having very similar stellar masses, higher gas fractions and higher star formation rates relative to their CDM counterparts. We highlight these differences by making predictions for how the number of galaxies with old stellar populations is suppressed in ETHOS for both z = 6 galaxies and for gas-poor Local Group fossil galaxies. Interestingly, we find an age gradient in ETHOS between galaxies that form in high- and low-density environments.


2019 ◽  
Vol 488 (2) ◽  
pp. 2121-2142 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Cataneo ◽  
L Lombriser ◽  
C Heymans ◽  
A J Mead ◽  
A Barreira ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We present a general method to compute the non-linear matter power spectrum for dark energy (DE) and modified gravity scenarios with per cent-level accuracy. By adopting the halo model and non-linear perturbation theory, we predict the reaction of a lambda cold dark matter (ΛCDM) matter power spectrum to the physics of an extended cosmological parameter space. By comparing our predictions to N-body simulations we demonstrate that with no-free parameters we can recover the non-linear matter power spectrum for a wide range of different w0–wa DE models to better than 1 per cent accuracy out to k ≈ 1 $h \,{\rm Mpc}^{-1}$. We obtain a similar performance for both DGP and f(R) gravity, with the non-linear matter power spectrum predicted to better than 3 per cent accuracy over the same range of scales. When including direct measurements of the halo mass function from the simulations, this accuracy improves to 1 per cent. With a single suite of standard ΛCDM N-body simulations, our methodology provides a direct route to constrain a wide range of non-standard extensions to the concordance cosmology in the high signal-to-noise non-linear regime.


2020 ◽  
Vol 500 (3) ◽  
pp. 3162-3177
Author(s):  
Jurek B Bauer ◽  
David J E Marsh ◽  
Renée Hložek ◽  
Hamsa Padmanabhan ◽  
Alex Laguë

ABSTRACT We consider intensity mapping (IM) of neutral hydrogen (H i) in the redshift range 0 ≲ z ≲ 3 employing a halo model approach where H i is assumed to follow the distribution of dark matter (DM) haloes. If a portion of the DM is composed of ultralight axions, then the abundance of haloes is changed compared to cold DM below the axion Jeans mass. With fixed total H i density, $\Omega _{\rm H\, \rm {\small I}}$, assumed to reside entirely in haloes, this effect introduces a scale-independent increase in the H i power spectrum on scales above the axion Jeans scale, which our model predicts consistent with N-body simulations. Lighter axions introduce a scale-dependent feature even on linear scales due to its suppression of the matter power spectrum near the Jeans scale. We use the Fisher matrix formalism to forecast the ability of future H i surveys to constrain the axion fraction of DM and marginalize over astrophysical and model uncertainties. We find that a HIRAX-like survey is a very reliable IM survey configuration, being affected minimally by uncertainties due to non-linear scales, while the SKA1MID configuration is the most constraining as it is sensitive to non-linear scales. Including non-linear scales and combining a SKA1MID-like IM survey with the Simons Observatory CMB, the benchmark ‘fuzzy DM’ model with ma = 10−22 eV can be constrained at few per cent. This is almost an order of magnitude improvement over current limits from the Ly α forest. For lighter ULAs, this limit improves below 1 per cent, and allows the possibility to test the connection between axion models and the grand unification scale across a wide range of masses.


2020 ◽  
Vol 493 (1) ◽  
pp. L11-L15 ◽  
Author(s):  
M R Lovell

ABSTRACT The claimed detection of large amounts of substructure in lensing flux anomalies, and in Milky Way stellar stream gap statistics, has led to a step change in constraints on simple warm dark matter models. In this study, we compute predictions for the halo mass function both for these simple models and for comprehensive particle physics models of sterile neutrinos and dark acoustic oscillations. We show that the mass function fit of Lovell et al. underestimates the number of haloes less massive than the half-mode mass, $M_\mathrm {hm}$, by a factor of 2, relative to the extended Press–Schechter (EPS) method. The alternative approach of applying EPS to the Viel et al. matter power spectrum fit instead suggests good agreement at $M_\mathrm {hm}$ relative to the comprehensive model matter power spectrum results, although the number of haloes with mass $\rm{\lt} M_\mathrm {hm}$ is still suppressed due to the absence of small-scale power in the fitting function. Overall, we find that the number of dark matter haloes with masses $\rm{\lt} 10^{8}{\, \rm M_\odot }$ predicted by competitive particle physics models is underestimated by a factor of ∼2 when applying popular fitting functions, although careful studies that follow the stripping and destruction of subhaloes will be required in order to draw robust conclusions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 783 ◽  
pp. 76-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ran Huo ◽  
Manoj Kaplinghat ◽  
Zhen Pan ◽  
Hai-Bo Yu

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