View : 602 Download: 0

Galaxy bias and non-linear structure formation in general relativity

Title
Galaxy bias and non-linear structure formation in general relativity
Authors
Baldauf T.Seljak U.Senatore L.Zaldarriaga M.
Ewha Authors
Uros Seljak
SCOPUS Author ID
Uros Seljakscopus
Issue Date
2011
Journal Title
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
ISSN
1475-7516JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics vol. 2011, no. 10
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Length scales probed by the large scale structure surveys are becoming closer and closer to the horizon scale. Further, it has been recently understood that non-Gaussianity in the initial conditions could show up in a scale dependence of the bias of galaxies at the largest possible distances. It is therefore important to take General Relativistic effects into account. Here we provide a General Relativistic generalization of the bias that is valid both for Gaussian and for non-Gaussian initial conditions. The collapse of objects happens on very small scales, while long-wavelength modes are always in the quasi linear regime. Around every small collapsing region, it is therefore possible to find a reference frame that is valid for arbitrary times and where the space time is almost flat: the Fermi frame. Here the Newtonian approximation is applicable and the equations of motion are the ones of the standard N-body codes. The effects of long-wavelength modes are encoded in the mapping from the cosmological frame to the local Fermi frame. At the level of the linear bias, the effect of the long-wavelength modes on the dynamics of the short scales is all encoded in the local curvature of the Universe, which allows us to define a General Relativistic generalization of the bias in the standard Newtonian setting. We show that the bias due to this effect goes to zero as the square of the ratio between the physical wavenumber and the Hubble scale for modes longer than the horizon, confirming the intuitive picture that modes longer than the horizon do not have any dynamical effect. On the other hand, the bias due to non-Gaussianities does not need to vanish for modes longer than the Hubble scale, and for non-Gaussianities of the local kind it goes to a constant. As a further application of our setup, we show that it is not necessary to perform large N-body simulations to extract information about long-wavelength modes: N-body simulations can be done on small scales and long-wavelength modes are encoded simply by adding curvature to the simulation, as well as rescaling the time and the scale. © 2011 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.
DOI
10.1088/1475-7516/2011/10/031
Appears in Collections:
자연과학대학 > 물리학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE