Morphological classification of radio sources for galaxy evolution and cosmology with the SKA

Proceedings of Science 9-13-June-2014 (2014)

Authors:

S Makhathini, OM Smirnov, MJ Jarvis, I Heywood

Abstract:

Morphologically classifying radio sources in continuum images with the SKA has the potential to address some of the key questions in cosmology and galaxy evolution. In particular, we may use different classes of radio sources as independent tracers of the dark-matter density field, and thus overcome cosmic variance in measuring large-scale structure, while on the galaxy evolution side we could measure the mechanical feedback from FRII and FRI jets. This work makes use of a MeqTrees-based simulations framework to forecast the ability of the SKA to recover true source morphologies at high redshifts. A suite of high resolution images containing realistic continuum source distributions with different morphologies (FRI, FRII, starburst galaxies) is fed through an SKA Phase 1 simulator, then analysed to determine the sensitivity limits at which the morphologies can still be distinguished. We also explore how changing the antenna distribution affects these results.

Overview of complementarity and synergy with other wavelengths in cosmology in the SKA era

Proceedings of Science 9-13-June-2014 (2014)

Authors:

K Takahashi, ML Brown, C Burigana, CA Jackson, M Jarvis, TD Kitching, JP Kneib, M Oguri, S Prunet, H Shan, JL Starck, D Yamauchi

Abstract:

We give an overview of complementarity and synergy in cosmology between the Square Kilometre Array and future survey projects in other wavelengths. In the SKA era, precision cosmology will be limited by systematic errors and cosmic variance, rather than statistical errors. However, combining and/or cross-correlating multi-wavelength data, from the SKA to the cosmic microwave background, optical/infrared and X-ray, substantially reduce these limiting factors. In this chapter, we summarize future survey projects and show highlights of complementarity and synergy, which can be very powerful to probe major cosmological problems such as dark energy, modified gravity and primordial non-Gaussianity.

Overview of cosmology with the SKA

Proceedings of Science 9-13-June-2014 (2014)

Authors:

R Maartens, FB Abdalla, M Jarvis, MG Santos

Abstract:

The new frontier of cosmology will be led by three-dimensional surveys of the large-scale structure of the Universe. Based on its all-sky surveys and redshift depth, the SKA is destined to revolutionize cosmology, in combination with future optical/ infrared surveys such as Euclid and LSST. Furthermore, we will not have to wait for the full deployment of the SKA in order to see transformational science. In the first phase of deployment (SKA1), all-sky HI intensity mapping surveys and all-sky continuum surveys are forecast to be at the forefront on the major questions of cosmology. We give a broad overview of the major contributions predicted for the SKA. The SKA will not only deliver precision cosmology - it will also probe the foundations of the standard model and open the door to new discoveries on large-scale features of the Universe.

SKA synergy with microwave background studies

Chapter in , 9-13-June-2014 (2014)

Authors:

C Burigana, P Alexander, C Baccigalupi, D Barbosa, A Blanchard, AD Rosa, G De Zotti, F Finelli, A Gruppuso, M Jones, S Matarrese, A Melchiorri, D Molinari, M Negrello, D Paoletti, F Perrotta, R Scaramella, T Trombetti

Abstract:

The extremely high sensitivity and resolution of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be useful for addressing a wide set of themes relevant for cosmology, in synergy with current and future cosmic microwave background (CMB) projects. Many of these themes also have a link with future optical-IR and X-ray observations. We discuss the scientific perspectives for these goals, the instrumental requirements and the observational and data analysis approaches, and identify several topics that are important for cosmology and astrophysics at different cosmic epochs.

Synergy between the large synoptic survey telescope and the square kilometre array

Proceedings of Science 9-13-June-2014 (2014)

Authors:

D Bacon, S Bridle, FB Abdalla, M Brown, P Bull, S Camera, R Fender, K Grainge, Ž Ivezíc, M Jarvis, N Jackson, D Kirk, B Mann, J McEwen, J McKean, J Newman, A Raccanelli, M Sahlén, M Santos, A Tyson, GB Zhao

Abstract:

We provide an overview of the science benefits of combining information from the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST). We first summarise the capabilities and timeline of the LSST and overview its science goals. We then discuss the science questions in common between the two projects, and how they can be best addressed by combining the data from both telescopes. We describe how weak gravitational lensing and galaxy clustering studies with LSST and SKA can provide improved constraints on the causes of the cosmological acceleration. We summarise the benefits to galaxy evolution studies of combining deep optical multi-band imaging with radio observations. Finally, we discuss the excellent match between one of the most unique features of the LSST, its temporal cadence in the optical waveband, and the time resolution of the SKA.