Euclid preparation. Simulating thousands of Euclid spectroscopic skies
Euclid Collaboration: P. Monaco (1, 2, 3, 4), G. Parimbelli (5, 6, 7), M. Y. Elkhashab (2, 3, 1, 8), J. Salvalaggio (2, 8, 1, 3), T. Castro (2, 3, 8, 4), M. D. Lepinzan (1, 2), E. Sarpa (7, 4, 3), E. Sefusatti (2, 8, 3), L. Stanco (9), L. Tornatore (2), G. E. Addison (10)

TL;DR
This paper introduces extensive simulated galaxy skies for Euclid, generated with the PINOCCHIO code and halo occupation models, to support galaxy clustering analysis and validate cosmological inferences.
Contribution
It presents the largest public sets of simulated Euclid skies, validated against real data, and demonstrates their use in cosmological parameter inference.
Findings
Simulated skies are consistent with real Euclid data.
Small deviations observed at high k in quadrupole.
Cosmological inferences are robust across simulations.
Abstract
We present two extensive sets of 3500+1000 simulations of dark matter haloes on the past light cone, and two corresponding sets of simulated (`mock') galaxy catalogues that represent the Euclid spectroscopic sample. The simulations were produced with the latest version of the PINOCCHIO code, and provide the largest, public set of simulated skies. Mock galaxy catalogues were obtained by populating haloes with galaxies using an halo occupation distribution (HOD) model extracted from the Flagship galaxy catalogue provided by Euclid Collaboration. The Geppetto set of 3500 simulated skies was obtained by tiling a 1.2 Gpc/h box to cover a light-cone whose sky footprint is a circle of 30 deg radius, for an area of 2763 deg and a minimum halo mass of Msun/h. The relatively small box size makes this set unfit for measuring very large scales. The EuclidLargeBox set consists…
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