Modelling large-scale halo bias using the bispectrum
Jennifer E. Pollack, Robert E. Smith, Cristiano Porciani

TL;DR
This paper investigates the large-scale bias of halos in the LCDM model using bispectrum measurements from N-body simulations, highlighting the limitations of quadratic bias models and the need for higher-order theories for accurate galaxy survey analysis.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of halo bias parameters using bispectrum statistics and demonstrates the inadequacy of low-order models, emphasizing the necessity for more complex models.
Findings
Bias parameters vary with smoothing scale in real space.
Low-order models fail to accurately fit bispectrum data at smaller scales.
Higher-order terms are essential for modeling the nonlinear matter bispectrum.
Abstract
We study the relation between the halo and matter density fields -- commonly termed bias -- in the LCDM framework. In particular, we examine the local model of biasing at quadratic order in the matter density. This model is characterized by parameters b_1 and b_2. Using an ensemble of N-body simulations, we apply several statistical methods to estimate the parameters. We measure halo and matter fluctuations smoothed on various scales and find that the parameters vary with smoothing scale. We argue that, for real-space measurements, owing to the mixing of wavemodes, no scale can be found for which the parameters are independent of smoothing. However, this is not the case in Fourier space. We measure halo power spectra and construct estimates for an effective large-scale bias. We measure the configuration dependence of the halo bispectra B_hhh and reduced bispectra Q_hhh for very…
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