The Evolution of Bias - Generalized
Lam Hui, Kyle P. Parfrey (Columbia University)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that galaxy bias tends to evolve towards unity in modified gravity theories, with scale-dependent relaxation rates influenced by cosmic acceleration and potential for observational tests of gravity.
Contribution
It generalizes Fry's bias evolution model to modified gravity and nonlinear bias, highlighting scale dependence and proposing observational tests for gravity theories.
Findings
Bias tends towards unity in modified gravity theories.
Scale dependence in bias relaxation can reveal deviations from standard gravity.
Large-scale bias retains memory of initial conditions longer.
Abstract
Fry (1996) showed that galaxy bias has the tendency to evolve towards unity, i.e. in the long run, the galaxy distribution tends to trace that of matter. Generalizing slightly Fry's reasoning, we show that his conclusion remains valid in theories of modified gravity (or equivalently, complex clustered dark energy). This is not surprising: as long as both galaxies and matter are subject to the same force, dynamics would drive them towards tracing each other. This holds, for instance, in theories where both galaxies and matter move on geodesics. This relaxation of bias towards unity is tempered by cosmic acceleration, however: the bias tends towards unity but does not quite make it, unless the formation bias were close to unity. Our argument is extended in a straightforward manner to the case of a stochastic or nonlinear bias. An important corollary is that dynamical evolution could…
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