Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results: Galaxy mock catalogs for BAO analysis
I. Ferrero, M. Crocce, I. Tutusaus, A. Porredon, L. Blot, P. Fosalba,, A. Carnero Rosell, S. Avila, A. Izard, J. Elvin-Poole, K. C. Chan, H., Camacho, R. Rosenfeld, E. Sanchez, P. Tallada-Cresp\'i, J. Carretero, I., Sevilla-Noarbe, E. Gaztanaga, F. Andrade-Oliveira

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive set of 1952 galaxy mock catalogs for DES Year 3 BAO analysis, utilizing advanced simulation and calibration techniques to accurately reproduce galaxy properties and clustering.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel pipeline for creating realistic galaxy mocks with calibrated photometric redshifts and clustering, tailored for BAO studies in photometric surveys.
Findings
Mocks accurately reproduce galaxy redshift distributions
Clustering statistics match theoretical predictions
Pipeline serves as a benchmark for future surveys
Abstract
The calibration and validation of scientific analysis in simulations is a fundamental tool to ensure unbiased and robust results in observational cosmology. In particular, mock galaxy catalogs are a crucial resource to achieve these goals in the measurement of baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) in the clustering of galaxies. Here we present a set of 1952 galaxy mock catalogs designed to mimic the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 3 BAO sample over its full photometric redshift range . The mocks are based upon 488 ICE-COLA fast -body simulations of full-sky light cones and were created by populating halos with galaxies, using a hybrid halo occupation distribution - halo abundance matching model. This model has ten free parameters, which were determined, for the first time, using an automatic likelihood minimization procedure. We also introduced a novel technique to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
