Modelling redshift space distortions in hierarchical cosmologies
Elise Jennings, Carlton M. Baugh, Silvia Pascoli

TL;DR
This paper investigates redshift space distortions in large-scale structure, compares models with simulations, and provides improved predictions to enhance the analysis of future galaxy surveys for cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces an improved model for redshift space distortions that accounts for non-linear effects and provides a universal formula for the velocity divergence spectrum across cosmologies.
Findings
Linear theory poorly fits measured distortions at large scales.
An improved model matches simulations up to k ~ 0.2 h/Mpc.
A cosmology-independent relation links velocity divergence and matter power spectra.
Abstract
The anisotropy of clustering in redshift space provides a direct measure of the growth rate of large scale structure in the Universe. Future galaxy redshift surveys will make high precision measurements of these distortions, and will potentially allow us to distinguish between different scenarios for the accelerating expansion of the Universe. Accurate predictions are needed in order to distinguish between competing cosmological models. We study the distortions in the redshift space power spectrum in CDM and quintessence dark energy models, using large volume N-body simulations, and test predictions for the form of the redshift space distortions. We find that the linear perturbation theory prediction by Kaiser (1987) is a poor fit to the measured distortions, even on surprisingly large scales Mpc. An improved model for the redshift space power spectrum,…
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