Constraining Primordial Magnetic Fields with Future Cosmic Shear Surveys
C. Fedeli, L. Moscardini

TL;DR
This paper investigates how future cosmic shear surveys, like Euclid, can constrain primordial magnetic fields by analyzing their impact on matter clustering and the resulting convergence power spectrum.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic model to forecast constraints on primordial magnetic fields using cosmic shear data, highlighting the potential for detection at various spectral indices.
Findings
Enhanced matter clustering at small scales due to magnetic fields.
Euclid can constrain magnetic field amplitude to ~0.1 nG for certain spectral indices.
Detection of primordial magnetic fields is feasible for high spectral indices.
Abstract
The origin of astrophysical magnetic fields observed in galaxies and clusters of galaxies is still unclear. One possibility is that primordial magnetic fields generated in the early Universe provide seeds that grow through compression and turbulence during structure formation. A cosmological magnetic field present prior to recombination would produce substantial matter clustering at intermediate/small scales, on top of the standard inflationary power spectrum. In this work we study the effect of this alteration on one particular cosmological observable, cosmic shear. We adopt the semi-analytic halo model in order to describe the non-linear clustering of matter, and feed it with the altered mass variance induced by primordial magnetic fields. We find that the convergence power spectrum is, as expected, substantially enhanced at intermediate/small angular scales, with the exact amplitude…
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