Author:
Lepori Francesca,Schulz Sebastian,Adamek Julian,Durrer Ruth
Abstract
Abstract
We present the halo number counts and its two-point statistics, the observable angular
power spectrum, extracted for the first time from relativistic N-body simulations. The halo
catalogues used in this work are built from the relativistic N-body code gevolution, and
the observed redshift and angular positions of the sources are computed using a non-perturbative
ray-tracing method, which includes all relativistic scalar contributions to the number counts. We
investigate the validity and limitations of the linear bias prescription to describe our simulated
power spectra. In particular, we assess the consistency of different bias measurements on large
scales, and we estimate up to which scales a linear bias is accurate in modelling the data, within
the statistical errors. We then test a second-order perturbative bias expansion for the angular
statistics, on a range of redshifts and scales previously unexplored in this context, that is 0.4 ≤ z̅ ≤ 2 up to scales ℓ
max ∼ 1000. We find that the angular
power spectra at equal redshift can be modelled with high accuracy with a minimal extension of the
number of bias parameters, that is using a two-parameter model comprising linear bias and tidal
bias. We show that this model performs significantly better than a model without tidal bias but
with quadratic bias as extra degree of freedom, and that the latter is inaccurate at z̅ ≥
0.7. Finally, we extract from our simulations the cross-correlation of halo number counts and
lensing convergence. We show that the estimate of the linear bias from this cross-correlation is
consistent with the measurements based on the clustering statistics alone, and that it is crucial
to take into account the effect of magnification in the halo number counts to avoid systematic
shifts in the computed bias.
Subject
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
3 articles.
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