Information Content of Higher-Order Galaxy Correlation Functions
Lado Samushia, Zachary Slepian, Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that higher-order galaxy correlation functions, like the bispectrum, can provide more precise cosmological distance measurements than the power spectrum alone, even with perfect initial density field reconstruction.
Contribution
It challenges the claim that all information is contained in the initial power spectrum by showing higher-order functions offer additional, valuable constraints.
Findings
Bispectrum alone reduces variance in distance measurements by a factor of two.
Joint analysis of power spectrum and bispectrum can outperform initial power spectrum constraints.
Higher-order correlation functions contain unique information not captured by the initial power spectrum.
Abstract
The shapes of galaxy N-point correlation functions can be used as standard rulers to constrain the distance-redshift relationship and thence the expansion rate of the Universe. The cosmological density fields traced by late-time galaxy formation are initially nearly Gaussian, and hence all the cosmological information can be extracted from their 2-Point Correlation Function (2PCF) or its Fourier-space analog the power spectrum. Subsequent nonlinear evolution under gravity, as well as halo and then galaxy formation, generate higher-order correlation functions. Since the mapping of the initial to the final density field is, on large scales, invertible, it is often claimed that the information content of the initial field's power spectrum is equal to that of all the higher-order functions of the final, nonlinear field. This claim implies that reconstruction of the initial density field…
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