6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125d93b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Thinking outside the box: effects of modes larger than the survey on matter power spectrum covariance

Olga MenaChristian WagnerRoland De PutterRoland De PutterLicia VerdeWill J. Percival

subject

Astrofísicadark matter simulationsCosmology and GravitationCosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)FOS: Physical sciencesBeat (acoustics)Astrophysicspower spectrumAstrophysics01 natural sciences0103 physical sciencesStatistical physics010303 astronomy & astrophysics/dk/atira/pure/core/subjects/cosmologyPhysicsCosmologia010308 nuclear & particles physicsCovariance matrixMatter power spectrumcosmological simulationsSpectral densityFísicaAstronomy and AstrophysicsCovarianceRedshiftGalaxyCosmologyStepping stonegalaxy clusteringAstrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics

description

Considering the matter power spectrum covariance matrix, it has recently been found that there is a potentially dominant effect on mildly non-linear scales due to power in modes of size equal to and larger than the survey volume. This {\it beat coupling} effect has been derived analytically in perturbation theory and while it has been tested with simulations, some questions remain unanswered. Moreover, there is an additional effect of these large modes, which has so far not been included in analytic studies, namely the effect on the estimated {\it average} density which enters the power spectrum estimate. In this article, we work out analytic, perturbation theory based expressions including both the beat coupling and this {\it local average effect} and we show that while, when isolated, beat coupling indeed causes large excess covariance in agreement with the literature, in a realistic scenario this is compensated almost entirely by the local average effect, leaving only $\sim 10 %$ of the excess. We test our analytic expressions by comparison to a suite of large N-body simulations. For the variances, we find excellent agreement with the analytic expressions for $k < 0.2 h$Mpc$^{-1}$ at $z=0.5$, while the correlation coefficients agree to beyond $k=0.4 h$Mpc$^{-1}$. As expected, the range of agreement increases towards higher redshift and decreases slightly towards $z=0$. We finish by including the large-mode effects in a full covariance matrix description for arbitrary survey geometry and confirming its validity using simulations. This may be useful as a stepping stone towards building an actual galaxy (or other tracer's) power spectrum covariance matrix. [abridged]

10.1088/1475-7516/2012/04/019http://hdl.handle.net/10550/37298