Cosmic velocity--gravity relation in redshift space
St\'ephane Colombi (IAP Paris), Micha{\l} Chodorowski (Copernicus),, Romain Teyssier (CEA Saclay)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to estimate the cosmological parameter beta by analyzing the relation between galaxy velocity and gravity fields directly in redshift space, validated through simulations.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach to measure beta without reconstructing the real-space density field, using a simple adaptive interpolation and testing nonlinear effects with simulations.
Findings
Linear theory relation holds within 1-1.5 sigma region in PDFs
Nonlinear effects mainly affect the tails of the velocity-gravity PDF
The method is applicable to real galaxy catalogs with considerations for bias and shot noise
Abstract
We propose a simple way to estimate the parameter beta = Omega_m^(0.6)/b from three-dimensional galaxy surveys. Our method consists in measuring the relation between the cosmological velocity and gravity fields, and thus requires peculiar velocity measurements. The relation is measured *directly in redshift space*, so there is no need to reconstruct the density field in real space. In linear theory, the radial components of the gravity and velocity fields in redshift space are expected to be tightly correlated, with a slope given, in the distant observer approximation, by g / v = (1 + 6 beta / 5 + 3 beta^2 / 7)^(1/2) / beta. We test extensively this relation using controlled numerical experiments based on a cosmological N-body simulation. To perform the measurements, we propose a new and rather simple adaptive interpolation scheme to estimate the velocity and the gravity field on a…
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