Matter bispectrum of large-scale structure: Three-dimensional comparison between theoretical models and numerical simulations
Andrei Lazanu, Tommaso Giannantonio, Marcel Schmittfull, E.P.S., Shellard

TL;DR
This paper compares various theoretical models of the matter bispectrum with N-body simulations, finding that effective field theory extends validity into mildly nonlinear regimes and proposing a new phenomenological model that accurately fits simulation data across scales.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive three-dimensional comparison of theoretical bispectrum models with simulations and introduces a new simple phenomenological model for accurate bispectrum description.
Findings
EFT extends validity into mildly nonlinear regime
Halo model underestimates power on intermediate scales
Proposed three-shape model accurately fits simulation data
Abstract
We study the matter bispectrum of the large-scale structure by comparing different perturbative and phenomenological models with measurements from -body simulations obtained with a modal bispectrum estimator. Using shape and amplitude correlators, we directly compare simulated data with theoretical models over the full three-dimensional domain of the bispectrum, for different redshifts and scales. We review and investigate the main perturbative methods in the literature that predict the one-loop bispectrum: standard perturbation theory, effective field theory, resummed Lagrangian and renormalised perturbation theory, calculating the latter also at two loops for some triangle configurations. We find that effective field theory (EFT) succeeds in extending the range of validity furthest into the mildly nonlinear regime, albeit at the price of free extra parameters requiring calibration…
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