Euclid preparation: II. The EuclidEmulator -- A tool to compute the cosmology dependence of the nonlinear matter power spectrum
Euclid Collaboration, Mischa Knabenhans, Joachim Stadel, Stefano, Marelli, Doug Potter, Romain Teyssier, Laurent Legrand, Aurel Schneider,, Bruno Sudret, Linda Blot, Saeeda Awan, Carlo Burigana, Carla Sofia Carvalho,, Hannu Kurki-Suonio, Gabriele Sirri

TL;DR
The EuclidEmulator is a fast, accurate tool for predicting the nonlinear matter power spectrum's dependence on cosmology, enabling efficient cosmological parameter estimation from large-scale structure data.
Contribution
This paper introduces EuclidEmulator, a novel emulator based on polynomial chaos expansion, validated with high-resolution simulations, and outperforming existing models like HALOFIT and CosmicEmu.
Findings
Achieves ~0.3% accuracy in nonlinear correction prediction
Provides a C-code for rapid computation within 50 ms
Demonstrates superior accuracy compared to HALOFIT and CosmicEmu
Abstract
We present a new power spectrum emulator named EuclidEmulator that estimates the nonlinear correction to the linear dark matter power spectrum. It is based on a spectral decomposition method called polynomial chaos expansion. All steps in the construction of the emulator have been tested and optimized: the large high-resolution N-body simulations carried out with PKDGRAV3 were validated using a simulation from the Euclid Flagship campaign and demonstrated to have converged up to wavenumbers for redshifts . The emulator is constructed using the uncertainty quantification software UQLab and it has been optimized first by creating mock emulators based on Takahashi's HALOFIT. We show that it is possible to successfully predict the performance of the final emulator in this way prior to performing any N-body simulations. We provide a C-code to…
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