4.7 Article

HIGH-PRECISION PREDICTIONS FOR THE ACOUSTIC SCALE IN THE NONLINEAR REGIME

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 720, Issue 2, Pages 1650-1667

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/720/2/1650

Keywords

distance scale; large-scale structure of universe; methods: numerical

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-07CH11359]
  2. NSF [AST-0707725]
  3. NASA [BEFS NNX07AH11G]
  4. [467]

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We measure shifts of the acoustic scale due to nonlinear growth and redshift distortions to a high precision using a very large volume of high-force-resolution simulations. We compare results from various sets of simulations that differ in their force, volume, and mass resolution. We find a consistency within 1.5 sigma for shift values from different simulations and derive shift alpha(z) - 1 = (0.300 +/- 0.015)%[ D(z)/D(0)](2) using our fiducial set. We find a strong correlation with a non-unity slope between shifts in real space and in redshift space and a weak correlation between the initial redshift and low redshift. Density-field reconstruction not only removes the mean shifts and reduces errors on the mean, but also tightens the correlations. After reconstruction, we recover a slope of near unity for the correlation between the real and redshift space and restore a strong correlation between the initial and the low redshifts. We derive propagators and mode-coupling terms from our N-body simulations and compare with the Zel'dovich approximation and the shifts measured from the chi(2) fitting, respectively. We interpret the propagator and the mode-coupling term of a nonlinear density field in the context of an average and a dispersion of its complex Fourier coefficients relative to those of the linear density field; from these two terms, we derive a signal-to-noise ratio of the acoustic peak measurement. We attempt to improve our reconstruction method by implementing 2LPT and iterative operations, but we obtain little improvement. The Fisher matrix estimates of uncertainty in the acoustic scale is tested using 5000 h(-3) Gpc(3) of cosmological Particle-Mesh simulations from Takahashi et al. At an expected sample variance level of 1%, the agreement between the Fisher matrix estimates based on Seo and Eisenstein and the N-body results is better than 10%.

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