TL;DR
This study investigates how initial baryon streaming velocities affect the BAO feature in the Lyman-$\\alpha$ forest, finding a small but potentially significant shift in the BAO scale at redshift 2.5, with implications for future cosmological measurements.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed hydrodynamic simulation analysis of streaming velocity effects on the Lyman-$\alpha$ BAO feature, quantifying the shift and discussing uncertainties.
Findings
BAO scale shifts by about 0.12% at z=2.5 due to streaming velocities.
Streaming velocity effects are subdominant but non-negligible for upcoming surveys.
The impact exceeds the cosmic variance floor, influencing precision cosmology.
Abstract
The baryon-acoustic oscillation (BAO) feature in the Lyman- forest is one of the key probes of the cosmic expansion rate at redshifts z~2.5, well before dark energy is believed to have become dynamically significant. A key advantage of the BAO as a standard ruler is that it is a sharp feature and hence is more robust against broadband systematic effects than other cosmological probes. However, if the Lyman- forest transmission is sensitive to the initial streaming velocity of the baryons relative to the dark matter, then the BAO peak position can be shifted. Here we investigate this sensitivity using a suite of hydrodynamic simulations of small regions of the intergalactic medium with a range of box sizes and physics assumptions; each simulation starts from initial conditions at the kinematic decoupling era (z~1059), undergoes a discrete change from neutral gas to…
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