Optimising Spectroscopic and Photometric Galaxy Surveys: Same-sky Benefits for Dark Energy and Modified Gravity
Donnacha Kirk, Ofer Lahav, Sarah Bridle, Stephanie Jouvel, Filipe B., Abdalla, Joshua A. Frieman

TL;DR
Combining overlapping photometric and spectroscopic galaxy surveys significantly enhances constraints on dark energy and modified gravity, with the same-sky overlap providing substantial improvements over non-overlapping surveys.
Contribution
This paper introduces a formalism to model cross-correlations in overlapping galaxy surveys, demonstrating substantial improvements in cosmological parameter constraints.
Findings
Overlapping surveys increase dark energy figure of merit by over 4 times.
Same-sky overlap improves constraints on modified gravity by more than a factor of 2.
Cross-correlations in overlapping surveys yield nearly 4 times better dark energy constraints.
Abstract
The combination of multiple cosmological probes can produce measurements of cosmological parameters much more stringent than those possible with any individual probe. We examine the combination of two highly correlated probes of late-time structure growth: (i) weak gravitational lensing from a survey with photometric redshifts and (ii) galaxy clustering and redshift space distortions from a survey with spectroscopic redshifts. We choose generic survey designs so that our results are applicable to a range of current and future photometric redshift (e.g. KiDS, DES, HSC, Euclid) and spectroscopic redshift (e.g. DESI, 4MOST, Sumire) surveys. Combining the surveys greatly improves their power to measure both dark energy and modified gravity. An independent, non-overlapping combination sees a dark energy figure of merit more than 4 times larger than that produced by either survey alone. The…
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