The effects of galaxy formation on the matter power spectrum: A challenge for precision cosmology
Marcel P. van Daalen (1, 2), Joop Schaye (1), C. M. Booth (1) and, Claudio Dalla Vecchia (1, 3) ((1) Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, (2) Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (3) Max Planck Institute for, Extraterrestrial Physics)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how baryonic processes, especially AGN feedback, significantly alter the matter power spectrum, highlighting the need to model these effects accurately for upcoming precision cosmology surveys.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation-based analysis of baryonic effects on the matter power spectrum, emphasizing the importance of AGN feedback in theoretical models.
Findings
AGN feedback reduces power by up to 30% at k~10 h/Mpc
Baryonic processes can change the power spectrum by tens of percent
Ignoring baryons leads to inaccurate predictions for weak lensing surveys
Abstract
Upcoming weak lensing surveys, such as LSST, EUCLID, and WFIRST, aim to measure the matter power spectrum with unprecedented accuracy. In order to fully exploit these observations, models are needed that, given a set of cosmological parameters, can predict the non-linear matter power spectrum at the level of 1% or better for scales corresponding to comoving wave numbers 0.1<k<10 h/Mpc. We have employed the large suite of simulations from the OWLS project to investigate the effects of various baryonic processes on the matter power spectrum. In addition, we have examined the distribution of power over different mass components, the back-reaction of the baryons on the CDM, and the evolution of the dominant effects on the matter power spectrum. We find that single baryonic processes are capable of changing the power spectrum by up to several tens of per cent. Our simulation that includes…
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