Cosmological parameter inference from galaxy clustering: The effect of the posterior distribution of the power spectrum
Abstract
We consider the shape of the posterior distribution to be used when fitting cosmological models to power spectra measured from galaxy surveys. At very large scales, Gaussian posterior distributions in the power do not approximate the posterior distribution PR we expect for a Gaussian density field δk, even if we vary the covariance matrix according to the model to be tested. We compare alternative posterior distributions with PR, both mode-by-mode and in terms of expected measurements of primordial non-Gaussianity parameterised by fNL. Marginalising over a Gaussian posterior distribution Pf with fixed covariance matrix yields a posterior mean value of fNL which, for a data set with the characteristics of Euclid, will be underestimated by fNL=0.4, while for the data release 9 (DR9) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) it will be underestimated by fNL=19.1. Adopting a different form of the posterior function means that we do not necessarily require a different covariance matrix for each model to be tested: this dependence is absorbed into the functional form of the posterior. Thus, the computational burden of analysis is significantly reduced.
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