Gravity and Large-Scale Non-local Bias
Kwan Chuen Chan, Roman Scoccimarro, Ravi K. Sheth

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that galaxy bias becomes inherently non-local and non-linear at large scales due to gravitational evolution, impacting cosmological measurements and requiring refined modeling for accurate analysis.
Contribution
It provides a formalism to describe non-local bias induced by gravity, including velocity bias effects, validated by simulations, improving galaxy bias modeling for cosmology.
Findings
Bias becomes non-local after formation time due to gravity.
Non-local gravitational fields can be constructed from deformation tensor invariants.
Accounting for non-local bias improves galaxy bispectrum analysis.
Abstract
The relationship between galaxy and matter overdensities, bias, is most often assumed to be local. This is however unstable under time evolution, we provide proofs under several sets of assumptions. In the simplest model galaxies are created locally and linearly biased at a single time, and subsequently move with the matter (no velocity bias) conserving their comoving number density (no merging). We show that, after this formation time, the bias becomes unavoidably non-local and non-linear at large scales. We identify the non-local gravitationally induced fields in which the galaxy overdensity can be expanded, showing that they can be constructed out of the invariants of the deformation tensor (Galileons). In addition, we show that this result persists if we include an arbitrary evolution of the comoving number density of tracers. We then include velocity bias, and show that new…
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