Learning the Universe: Cosmological and Astrophysical Parameter Inference with Galaxy Luminosity Functions and Colours

Nov 1, 2024·
Christopher C. Lovell
,
Tjitske Starkenburg
Matthew Ho
Matthew Ho
,
Daniel Anglés-Alcázar
,
Romeel Davé
,
Austen Gabrielpillai
,
Kartheik Iyer
,
Alice E. Matthews
,
William J. Roper
,
Rachel Somerville
,
Laura Sommovigo
,
Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro
· 1 min read
Abstract
We perform the first direct cosmological and astrophysical parameter inference from the combination of galaxy luminosity functions and colours using a simulation based inference approach. Using the Synthesizer code we simulate the dust attenuated ultraviolet–near infrared stellar emission from galaxies in thousands of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations from the CAMELS suite, including the Swift-EAGLE, Illustris-TNG, Simba & Astrid galaxy formation models. For each galaxy we calculate the rest-frame luminosity in a number of photometric bands, including the SDSS $textitugriz$ and GALEX FUV & NUV filters; this dataset represents the largest catalogue of synthetic photometry based on hydrodynamic galaxy formation simulations produced to date, totalling >200 million sources. From these we compile luminosity functions and colour distributions, and find clear dependencies on both cosmology and feedback. We then perform simulation based (likelihood-free) inference using these distributions, and obtain constraints on both cosmological and astrophysical parameters. Both colour distributions and luminosity functions provide complementary information on certain parameters when performing inference. Most interestingly we achieve constraints on $σ_8$, describing the clustering of matter. This is attributable to the fact that the photometry encodes the star formation–metal enrichment history of each galaxy; galaxies in a universe with a higher $σ_8$ tend to form earlier and have higher metallicities, which leads to redder colours. We find that a model trained on one galaxy formation simulation generalises poorly when applied to another, and attribute this to differences in the subgrid prescriptions, and lack of flexibility in our emission modelling. The photometric catalogues are publicly available at: https://camels.readthedocs.io/ .
Type
Publication
arXiv e-prints

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