The Information Content of Projected Galaxy Fields

Abstract

The power spectrum of the nonlinearly evolved large-scale mass distribution recovers only a minority of the information available on the mass fluctuation amplitude. We investigate the recovery of this information in 2D "slabs" of the mass distribution averaged over ≈100~h-1Mpc along the line of sight, as might be obtained from photometric redshift surveys. We demonstrate a Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC) method to reconstruct the non-Gaussian mass distribution in slabs, under the assumption that the projected field is a point-transformed Gaussian random field, Poisson-sampled by galaxies. When applied to the Quijote N-body suite at z=0.5 and at a transverse resolution of 2~h-1Mpc, the method recovers 30 times more information than the 2D power spectrum in the well-sampled limit, recovering the Gaussian limit on information. At a more realistic galaxy sampling density of 0.01~h3Mpc-3, shot noise reduces the information gain to a factor of 5 improvement over the power spectrum at resolutions of 4~h-1Mpc or smaller.

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