Position-dependent power spectrum of the large-scale structure: a novel method to measure the squeezed-limit bispectrum
Chi-Ting Chiang, Christian Wagner, Fabian Schmidt, and Eiichiro, Komatsu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to measure the squeezed-limit bispectrum in large-scale structure by correlating the position-dependent power spectrum with long-wavelength overdensity, simplifying bispectrum estimation.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel approach using the position-dependent power spectrum to measure the squeezed-limit bispectrum without complex three-point estimators.
Findings
Method accurately recovers the bispectrum from simulations.
Correlation matches theoretical predictions.
Simplifies bispectrum measurement in large-scale surveys.
Abstract
The influence of large-scale density fluctuations on structure formation on small scales is described by the three-point correlation function (bispectrum) in the so-called "squeezed configurations," in which one wavenumber, say , is much smaller than the other two, i.e., . This bispectrum is generated by non-linear gravitational evolution and possibly also by inflationary physics. In this paper, we use this fact to show that the bispectrum in the squeezed configurations can be measured without employing three-point function estimators. Specifically, we use the "position-dependent power spectrum," i.e., the power spectrum measured in smaller subvolumes of the survey (or simulation box), and correlate it with the mean overdensity of the corresponding subvolume. This correlation directly measures an integral of the bispectrum dominated by the squeezed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Blind Source Separation Techniques
