4.7 Article

Accuracy of power spectra in dissipationless cosmological simulations

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 512, Issue 2, Pages 1829-1842

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac578

Keywords

methods: numerical; large-scale structure of Universe

Funding

  1. Fondation CFM pour la Recherche
  2. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0013178]
  3. Simons Foundation
  4. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  5. Department of Energy ALCC program [AST135, AST145]

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This study investigates the convergence of the matter power spectrum using large N-body simulations and proposes conservative bounds on the accuracy of N-body simulations for non-scale-free models.
We exploit a suite of large N-body simulations (up to N = 4096(3)) performed with ABACUS, of scale-free models with a range of spectral indices n, to better understand and quantify convergence of the matter power spectrum. Using self-similarity to identify converged regions, we show that the maximal wavenumber resolved at a given level of accuracy increases monotonically as a function of time. At 1 per cent level it starts at early times from a fraction of k(Lambda), the Nyquist wavenumber of the initial grid, and reaches at most, if the force softening is sufficiently small, similar to 2-3 k(Lambda) at the very latest times we evolve to. At the 5 per cent level, accuracy extends up to wavenumbers of order 5k(Lambda) at late times. Expressed as a suitable function of the scale-factor, accuracy shows a very simple n-dependence, allowing a extrapolation to place conservative bounds on the accuracy of N-body simulations of non-scale-free models like LCDM. We note that deviations due to discretization in the converged range are not well modelled by shot noise, and subtracting it in fact degrades accuracy. Quantitatively our findings are broadly in line with the conservative assumptions about resolution adopted by recent studies using large cosmological simulations (e.g. Euclid Flagship) aiming to constrain the mildly non-linear regime. On the other hand, we remark that conclusions about small-scale clustering (e.g. concerning the validity of stable clustering) obtained using PS data at wavenumbers larger than a few k(Lambda) may need revision in light of our convergence analysis.

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