4.7 Article

A halo bias function measured deeply into voids without stochasticity

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 441, Issue 1, Pages 646-655

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu589

Keywords

cosmology: theory; large-scale structure of Universe

Funding

  1. New Frontiers in Astronomy and Cosmology grant from the Sir John Templeton Foundation
  2. DoE [SC-0008108]
  3. NASA [NNX12AE86G]
  4. NSF [0244990]

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We study the relationship between dark-matter haloes and matter in the MIP (multum in parvo) N-body simulation ensemble, which allows precision measurements of this relationship, even deeply into voids. What enables this is a lack of discreteness, stochasticity, and exclusion, achieved by averaging over hundreds of possible sets of initial small-scale modes, while holding fixed large-scale modes that give the cosmic web. We find (i) that dark-matter-halo formation is greatly suppressed in voids; there is an exponential downturn at low densities in the otherwise power-law matter-to-halo density bias function. Thus, the rarity of haloes in voids is akin to the rarity of the largest clusters, and their abundance is quite sensitive to cosmological parameters. The exponential downturn appears both in an excursion-set model, and in a model in which fluctuations evolve in voids as in an open universe with an effective Omega(m) proportional to a large-scale density. We also find that (ii) haloes typically populate the average halo-density field in a super-Poisson way, i. e. with a variance exceeding the mean; and (iii) the rank-order-Gaussianized halo and dark-matter fields are impressively similar in Fourier space. We compare both their power spectra and cross-correlation, supporting the conclusion that one is roughly a strictly increasing mapping of the other. The MIP ensemble especially reveals how halo abundance varies with 'environmental' quantities beyond the local matter density; (iv) we find a visual suggestion that at fixed matter density, filaments are more populated by haloes than clusters.

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