Cross-Correlation of spectroscopic and photometric galaxy surveys: cosmology from lensing and redshift distortions
E. Gaztanaga, M. Eriksen, M. Crocce, F. Castander, P. Fosalba, P., Marti, R. Miquel, A. Cabre

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that cross-correlating spectroscopic and photometric galaxy surveys significantly enhances constraints on dark energy and cosmic growth, surpassing traditional methods like BAO and RSD.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using cross-correlation of galaxy surveys to improve cosmological parameter constraints, leveraging multiple probes and redshift binning.
Findings
Cross-correlation improves constraints on dark energy and growth by factors of a few.
Using many narrow redshift bins and galaxy bias measurements breaks degeneracies.
Cross-correlation FoM can be up to 100 times larger than individual probes.
Abstract
Cosmological galaxy surveys aim at mapping the largest volumes to test models with techniques such as cluster abundance, cosmic shear correlations or baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), which are designed to be independent of galaxy bias. Here we explore an alternative route to constrain cosmology: sampling more moderate volumes with the cross-correlation of photometric and spectroscopic surveys. We consider the angular galaxy-galaxy autocorrelation in narrow redshift bins and its combination with different probes of weak gravitational lensing (WL) and redshift space distortions (RSD). Including the cross-correlation of these surveys improves by factors of a few the constraints on both the dark energy equation of state w(z) and the cosmic growth history, parametrized by \gamma. The additional information comes from using many narrow redshift bins and from galaxy bias, which is measured…
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