Redshift-space galaxy bispectrum in presence of massive neutrinos: A multipole expansion approach for Euclid
Sourav Pal, Debanjan Sarkar, Rickmoy Samanta, Supratik Pal

TL;DR
This paper develops a multipole expansion framework for the redshift-space galaxy bispectrum to detect signatures of massive neutrinos, showing that certain multipoles are highly sensitive and detectable in upcoming surveys like Euclid.
Contribution
The paper introduces an analytical and numerical framework for the galaxy bispectrum multipoles incorporating neutrino effects, enhancing the detection prospects of massive neutrinos in galaxy surveys.
Findings
Linear triangle configurations are highly sensitive to neutrinos, with deviations up to 2%.
Certain bispectrum multipoles have SNR ≥ 5, making them detectable in surveys.
Access to smaller scales improves detection prospects significantly.
Abstract
Massive neutrinos imprint distinctive signatures on the evolution of cosmic structures, notably suppressing small-scale clustering. We investigate the impact of massive neutrinos on the galaxy bispectrum in redshift-space, adopting a spherical harmonic multipole decomposition , that captures the full angular dependence. We develop an analytical and numerical framework incorporating neutrino-corrected perturbation theory kernels and redshift-space distortions. Our results demonstrate that the linear triangle configurations are particularly sensitive to massive neutrinos, with deviations reaching up to for a total mass . To assess detection prospects in galaxy surveys like \textit{Euclid}, we compute the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for individual multipoles, including the effects of Finger-of-God damping and shot noise. The…
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