Cosmological Parameters Degeneracies and Non-Gaussian Halo Bias

Abstract

We study the impact of the cosmological parameters uncertainties on the measurements of primordial non-Gaussianity through the large-scale non-Gaussian halo bias effect. While this is not expected to be an issue for the standard LCDM model, it may not be the case for more general models that modify the large-scale shape of the power spectrum. We consider the so-called local non-Gaussianity model and forecasts from planned surveys, alone and combined with a Planck CMB prior. In particular, we consider EUCLID- and LSST-like surveys and forecast the correlations among f NL and the running of the spectral index αs, the dark energy equation of state w, the effective sound speed of dark energy perturbations c2s, the total mass of massive neutrinos M=Σ m, and the number of extra relativistic degrees of freedom Nrel. Neglecting CMB information on f NL and scales k > 0.03 h/Mpc, we find that, if N rel is assumed to be known, the uncertainty on cosmological parameters increases the error on f NL by 10 to 30% depending on the survey. Thus the f NL constraint is remarkable robust to cosmological model uncertainties. On the other hand, if N rel is simultaneously constrained from the data, the f NL error increases by 80%. Finally, future surveys which provide a large sample of galaxies or galaxy clusters over a volume comparable to the Hubble volume can measure primordial non-Gaussianity of the local form with a marginalized 1--σ error of the order f NL 2-5, after combination with CMB priors for the remaining cosmological parameters. These results are competitive with CMB bispectrum constraints achievable with an ideal CMB experiment.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…