Cluster cosmology without cluster finding

Author:

Xhakaj Enia12ORCID,Leauthaud Alexie1ORCID,Lange Johannes1345ORCID,Krause Elisabeth6,Hearin Andrew2ORCID,Huang Song7ORCID,Wechsler Risa H3,Heydenreich Sven1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of California, Santa Cruz , 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 , USA

2. High-Energy Physics Division, Argonne National Laboratory , Argonne, IL 60439 , USA

3. Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology and Department of Physics, Stanford University , Stanford, CA 94305 , USA

4. Department of Physics, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI 48109 , USA

5. Leinweber Center for Theoretical Physics, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI 48109 , USA

6. Department of Astronomy/Steward Observatory, University of Arizona , 933 North Cherry Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85721-0065 , USA

7. Department of Astronomy, Tsinghua University , Beijing 100084 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT We propose that observations of supermassive galaxies contain cosmological statistical constraining power similar to conventional cluster cosmology, and we provide promising indications that the associated systematic errors are comparably easier to control. We consider a fiducial spectroscopic and stellar mass complete sample of galaxies drawn from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) and forecast how constraints on Ωm–σ8 from this sample will compare with those from number counts of clusters based on richness λ. At fixed number density, we find that massive galaxies offer similar constraints to galaxy clusters. However, a mass-complete galaxy sample from DESI has the potential to probe lower halo masses than standard optical cluster samples (which are typically limited to λ ≳ 20 and Mhalo ≳ 1013.5 M⊙ h−1); additionally, it is straightforward to cleanly measure projected galaxy clustering wp for such a DESI sample, which we show can substantially improve the constraining power on Ωm. We also compare the constraining power of M*-limited samples to those from larger but mass-incomplete samples [e.g. the DESI Bright Galaxy Survey (BGS) sample]; relative to a lower number density M*-limited samples, we find that a BGS-like sample improves statistical constraints by 60 per cent for Ωm and 40 per cent for σ8, but this uses small-scale information that will be harder to model for BGS. Our initial assessment of the systematics associated with supermassive galaxy cosmology yields promising results. The proposed samples have a ∼10 per cent satellite fraction, but we show that cosmological constraints may be robust to the impact of satellites. These findings motivate future work to realize the potential of supermassive galaxies to probe lower halo masses than richness-based clusters and to potentially avoid persistent systematics associated with optical cluster finding.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science

Office of High Energy Physics

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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