How closely do baryons follow dark matter on large scales?
Raul E. Angulo (1, 2), Oliver Hahn (1, 3), Tom Abel (1) ((1), KIPAC, Stanford University, (2) MPA, (3) ETH, Zurich)

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to analyze how baryons and dark matter cluster on large scales over cosmic time, showing that their distributions become increasingly similar, with minimal differences at low redshifts relevant for galaxy surveys.
Contribution
It demonstrates the importance of proper resolution in two-component simulations and quantifies the diminishing differences between baryons and dark matter clustering over time.
Findings
Baryon and dark matter clustering differences decrease over time.
BAO signature is damped in baryons and imprinted in dark matter.
Differences at low redshift are smaller than galaxy formation effects.
Abstract
We investigate the large-scale clustering and gravitational interaction of baryons and dark matter (DM) over cosmic time using a set of collisionless N-body simulations. Both components, baryons and DM, are evolved from distinct primordial density and velocity power spectra as predicted by early-universe physics. We first demonstrate that such two-component simulations require an unconventional match between force and mass resolution (i.e. force softening on at least the mean particle separation scale). Otherwise, the growth on any scale is not correctly recovered because of a spurious coupling between the two species at the smallest scales. With these simulations, we then demonstrate how the primordial differences in the clustering of baryons and DM are progressively diminished over time. In particular, we explicitly show how the BAO signature is damped in the spatial distribution of…
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