Paper

Learning neutrino effects in Cosmology with Convolutional Neural Networks

Measuring the sum of the three active neutrino masses, $M_\nu$, is one of the most important challenges in modern cosmology. Massive neutrinos imprint characteristic signatures on several cosmological observables in particular on the large-scale structure of the Universe. In order to maximize the information that can be retrieved from galaxy surveys, accurate theoretical predictions in the non-linear regime are needed. Currently, one way to achieve those predictions is by running cosmological numerical simulations. Unfortunately, producing those simulations requires high computational resources -- several hundred to thousand core-hours for each neutrino mass case. In this work, we propose a new method, based on a deep learning network, to quickly generate simulations with massive neutrinos from standard $\Lambda$CDM simulations without neutrinos. We computed multiple relevant statistical measures of deep-learning generated simulations, and conclude that our approach is an accurate alternative to the traditional N-body techniques. In particular the power spectrum is within $\simeq 6\%$ down to non-linear scales $k=0.7$~\rm h/Mpc. Finally, our method allows us to generate massive neutrino simulations 10,000 times faster than the traditional methods.

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