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Elise Jennings

Researcher at Argonne National Laboratory

Publications -  62
Citations -  3075

Elise Jennings is an academic researcher from Argonne National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dark energy & Dark matter. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 61 publications receiving 2612 citations. Previous affiliations of Elise Jennings include University of Manchester & Durham University.

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The DESI Experiment Part I: Science,Targeting, and Survey Design

Amir Aghamousa, +291 more
TL;DR: DESI as discussed by the authors is a ground-based dark energy experiment that will study baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) and the growth of structure through redshift-space distortions with a wide-area galaxy and quasar redshift survey.
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CosmoSIS: Modular cosmological parameter estimation

TL;DR: This paper presents a new framework for cosmological parameter estimation, CosmoSIS, designed to connect together, share, and advance development of inference tools across the community, including CAMB, Planck, cosmic shear calculations, and a suite of samplers.
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The non-linear matter and velocity power spectra in f(R) gravity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study the time evolution of the power spectrum in a f(R) gravity theory and their time evolution measured from several large-volume N-body simulations with varying box sizes and resolution.
Posted Content

The DESI Experiment Part II: Instrument Design

Amir Aghamousa, +297 more
TL;DR: DESI (Dark Energy Spectropic Instrument) as mentioned in this paper is a ground-based dark energy experiment that will study baryon acoustic oscillations and the growth of structure through redshift-space distortions with a wide-area galaxy and quasar redshift survey.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling Redshift Space Distortions in Hierarchical Cosmologies

TL;DR: Galaxy redshift surveys allow us to study the 3D spatial distribution of galaxies and clusters and provide accurate radial distances for galaxies in a homogeneous universe as discussed by the authors, however, peculiar velocities are gravitationally induced by inhomogeneous structure and distort the measured distances.