The information content of galaxy surveys
Julien Carron

TL;DR
This paper investigates the information content of galaxy surveys, revealing that traditional N-point functions capture very little information in the nonlinear regime, especially in underdense regions, impacting cosmological parameter inference.
Contribution
It quantifies the limitations of N-point moments in capturing information from heavy-tailed fields like the matter density, proposing correction methods and validating with simulations.
Findings
N-point functions capture only a tiny fraction of information in nonlinear regimes.
Underdense regions contain the most information but are poorly described by N-point hierarchies.
Simple mappings can improve information extraction from galaxy survey data.
Abstract
A large fraction of this thesis is dedicated to the study of the information content of random fields with heavy tails, in particular the lognormal field, a model for the matter density fluctuation field. It is well known that in the nonlinear regime of structure formation, the matter fluctuation field develops such large tails. It has also been suggested that fields with large tails are not necessarily well described by the hierarchy of -point functions. In this thesis, we are able to make this last statement precise and with the help of the lognormal model to quantify precisely its implications for inference on cosmological parameters : we find as our main result that only a tiny fraction of the total Fisher information of the field is still contained in the hierarchy of -point moments in the nonlinear regime, rendering parameter inference from such moments very inefficient. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic processes and financial applications · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
