ISW-LSS cross-correlation in coupled Dark Energy models with massive neutrinos

Nov, 2010
18 pages
Published in:
  • Astrophys.J. 744 (2012) 3
e-Print:

Citations per year

20112012201320142015012345
Abstract: (arXiv)
We provide an exhaustive analysis of the Integrated Sach-Wolfe effect (ISW) in the context of coupled Dark Energy cosmologies where a component of massive neutrinos is also present. We focus on the effects of both the coupling between Dark Matter and Dark Energy and of the neutrino mass on the cross-correlation between galaxy/quasar distributions and ISW effect. We provide a simple expression to appropriately rescale the galaxy bias when comparing different cosmologies. Theoretical predictions of the cross-correlation function are then compared with observational data. We find that, while it is not possible to distinguish among the models at low redshifts, discrepancies between coupled models and Λ\LambdaCDM increase with zz. In spite of this, current data alone seems not able to distinguish between coupled models and Λ\LambdaCDM. However, we show that upcoming galaxy surveys will permit tomographic analysis which allow to better discriminate among the models. We discuss the effects on cross-correlation measurements of ignoring galaxy bias evolution, b(z), and magnification bias correction and provide fitting formulae for b(z) for the cosmologies considered. We compare three different tomographic schemes and investigate how the expected signal to noise ratio, snr, of the ISW-LSS cross-correlation changes when increasing the number of tomographic bins. The dependence of snr on the area of the survey and the survey shot noise is also discussed.
Note:
  • 18 pages, 23 figures. Several major extensions. New sections and figures was added. ApJ in print
  • cosmology: cosmic microwave background
  • cosmology: miscellaneous
  • cosmology: observations
  • cosmology: theory
  • cosmology: large-scale structure of universe
  • dark energy: coupling
  • neutrino: massive
  • Sachs-Wolfe effect
  • dark matter
  • galaxy