Matter power spectrum and the challenge of percent accuracy
Aurel Schneider, Romain Teyssier, Doug Potter, Joachim Stadel, Julian, Onions, Darren S. Reed, Robert E. Smith, Volker Springel, Frazer R. Pearce,, and Roman Scoccimarro

TL;DR
Achieving one percent accuracy in the matter power spectrum for future galaxy surveys requires careful consideration of simulation methods, initial conditions, and resolution, with current codes reaching this precision up to certain scales.
Contribution
This study compares three major N-body simulation codes and quantifies the errors from setup choices, providing guidelines for achieving percent-level accuracy in large-scale structure modeling.
Findings
Codes agree within 1% at k≤1 h/Mpc
Box size should be ≥0.5 h^{-1} Gpc to avoid finite-volume effects
Simulations need over a trillion particles for upcoming survey accuracy
Abstract
Future galaxy surveys require one percent precision in the theoretical knowledge of the power spectrum over a large range including very nonlinear scales. While this level of accuracy is easily obtained in the linear regime with perturbation theory, it represents a serious challenge for small scales where numerical simulations are required. In this paper we quantify the precision of present-day -body methods, identifying main potential error sources from the set-up of initial conditions to the measurement of the final power spectrum. We directly compare three widely used -body codes, Ramses, Pkdgrav3, and Gadget3 which represent three main discretisation techniques: the particle-mesh method, the tree method, and a hybrid combination of the two. For standard run parameters, the codes agree to within one percent at and to within three percent at …
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