The Aemulus Project II: Emulating the Halo Mass Function
Thomas McClintock, Eduardo Rozo, Matthew R. Becker, Joseph DeRose,, Yau-Yuan Mao, Sean McLaughlin, Jeremy L. Tinker, Risa H. Wechsler, Zhongxu, Zhai

TL;DR
This paper introduces a highly accurate halo mass function emulator based on extensive simulations, reducing systematic uncertainties in cluster cosmology and outperforming existing models.
Contribution
The authors develop and validate a new emulator for the halo mass function using the AEMULUS simulation suite, covering a broad cosmological parameter space with improved precision.
Findings
Achieves better than 1% accuracy across key parameters
Confirms non-universality of the halo mass function with respect to parameters and redshift
Systematic uncertainties are negligible for upcoming LSST Year 1 data
Abstract
Existing models for the dependence of the halo mass function on cosmological parameters will become a limiting source of systematic uncertainty for cluster cosmology in the near future. We present a halo mass function emulator and demonstrate improved accuracy relative to state-of-the-art analytic models. In this work, mass is defined using an overdensity criteria of 200 relative to the mean background density. Our emulator is constructed from the AEMULUS simulations, a suite of 40 N-body simulations with snapshots from z=3 to z=0. These simulations cover the flat wCDM parameter space allowed by recent Cosmic Microwave Background, Baryon Acoustic Oscillation and Type Ia Supernovae results, varying the parameters w, Omega_m, Omega_b, sigma_8, N_{eff}, n_s, and H_0. We validate our emulator using five realizations of seven different cosmologies, for a total of 35 test simulations. These…
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