4.6 Article

Cosmology with massive neutrinos I: towards a realistic modeling of the relation between matter, haloes and galaxies

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2014/03/011

Keywords

cosmological simulations; cosmological neutrinos; neutrino masses from cosmology; cosmological parameters from LSS

Funding

  1. DOE
  2. ASU
  3. Japan Society for the promotion of Science
  4. Academy of Finland [1263714]
  5. World Premier International Research Center Intitative (WPI Intiative), MEXT, Japan
  6. IAP
  7. ERC [267117]
  8. Universite Pierre et Marie Curie- Paris 6
  9. NSF [OIA-1124403]
  10. [25287057]
  11. STFC [ST/H008586/1, ST/J005673/1, ST/K00333X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  12. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/J005673/1, ST/H008586/1, ST/K00333X/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25887012] Funding Source: KAKEN

Ask authors/readers for more resources

By using a suite of large box-size N-body simulations that incorporate massive neutrinos as an extra set of particles, with total masses of 0.15, 0.30, and 0.60 eV, we investigate the impact of neutrino masses on the spatial distribution of dark matter haloes and on the distribution of galaxies within the haloes. We compute the bias between the spatial distribution of dark matter haloes and the overall matter and cold dark matter distributions using statistical tools such as the power spectrum and the two-point correlation function. Overall we find a scale-dependent bias on large scales for the cosmologies with massive neutrinos. In particular, we find that the bias decreases with the scale, being this effect more important for higher neutrino masses and at high redshift. However, our results indicate that the scale-dependence in the bias is reduced if the latter is computed with respect to the cold dark matter distribution only. We find that the value of the bias on large scales is reasonably well reproduced by the Tinker fitting formula once the linear cold dark matter power spectrum is used, instead of the total matter power spectrum. We also investigate whether scale-dependent bias really comes from purely neutrino's effect or from nonlinear gravitational collapse of haloes. For this purpose, we address the Omega(v)-sigma(8) degeneracy and find that such degeneracy is not perfect, implying that neutrinos imprint a slight scale dependence on the large-scale bias. Finally, by using a simple halo occupation distribution (HOD) model, we investigate the impact of massive neutrinos on the distribution of galaxies within dark matter haloes. We use the main galaxy sample in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II Data Release 7 to investigate if the small-scale galaxy clustering alone can be used to discriminate among different cosmological models with different neutrino masses. Our results suggest that different choices of the HOD parameters can reproduce the observational measurements relatively well, and we quantify the difference between the values of the HOD parameters between massless and massive neutrino cosmologies.

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