Dark Energy Survey Year 1 Results: Constraining Baryonic Physics in the Universe
Hung-Jin Huang, Tim Eifler, Rachel Mandelbaum, Gary M. Bernstein, Anqi, Chen, Ami Choi, Juan Garc\'ia-Bellido, Dragan Huterer, Elisabeth Krause,, Eduardo Rozo, Sukhdeep Singh, Sarah Bridle, Joseph DeRose, Jack Elvin-Pole,, Xiao Fang, Oliver Friedrich, Marco Gatti

TL;DR
This paper uses DES Year 1 data combined with external measurements to constrain baryonic physics, improving cosmological parameter estimates by modeling baryonic effects with principal component analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a PCA-based method to model baryonic effects in large-scale structure, enabling improved cosmological constraints from small-scale data.
Findings
Achieved ~20% improvement in S8 constraint with baryonic modeling.
Excluded extreme AGN feedback scenarios at over 2 sigma.
Demonstrated that one principal component suffices to describe baryonic effects.
Abstract
Measurements of large-scale structure are interpreted using theoretical predictions for the matter distribution, including potential impacts of baryonic physics. We constrain the feedback strength of baryons jointly with cosmology using weak lensing and galaxy clustering observables (32pt) of Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 1 data in combination with external information from baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) and Planck cosmic microwave background polarization. Our baryon modeling is informed by a set of hydrodynamical simulations that span a variety of baryon scenarios; we span this space via a Principal Component (PC) analysis of the summary statistics extracted from these simulations. We show that at the level of DES Y1 constraining power, one PC is sufficient to describe the variation of baryonic effects in the observables, and the first PC amplitude () generally…
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