4.6 Article

Solving large scale structure in ten easy steps with COLA

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2013/06/036

Keywords

cosmological simulations; cosmological perturbation theory; dark matter theory; baryon acoustic oscillations

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [PHY-0855425, AST-0907969, PHY-1213563]
  2. David & Lucile Packard Foundation
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Physics [1213563] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  6. Division Of Physics [0855425] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We present the COmoving Lagrangian Acceleration (COLA) method: an N-body method for solving for Large Scale Structure (LSS) in a frame that is comoving with observers following trajectories calculated in Lagrangian Perturbation Theory (LPT). Unlike standard N-body methods, the COLA method can straightforwardly trade accuracy at small-scales in order to gain computational speed without sacrificing accuracy at large scales. This is especially useful for cheaply generating large ensembles of accurate mock halo catalogs required to study galaxy clustering and weak lensing, as those catalogs are essential for performing detailed error analysis for ongoing and future surveys of LSS. As an illustration, we ran a COLA-based N-body code on a box of size 100 Mpc/h with particles of mass approximate to 5 x 10(9) M-circle dot/h. Running the code with only 10 timesteps was sufficient to obtain an accurate description of halo statistics down to halo masses of at least 10(11) M-circle dot/h. This is only at a modest speed penalty when compared to mocks obtained with LPT. A standard detailed N-body run is orders of magnitude slower than our COLA-based code. The speed-up we obtain with COLA is due to the fact that we calculate the large-scale dynamics exactly using LPT, while letting the N-body code solve for the small scales, without requiring it to capture exactly the internal dynamics of halos. Achieving a similar level of accuracy in halo statistics without the COLA method requires at least 3 times more timesteps than when COLA is employed.

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