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Primordial non-Gaussianity, scale-dependent bias, and the bispectrum of galaxies

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arxiv 0904.0497 v2 pith:6ELB3FEY submitted 2009-04-03 astro-ph.CO

Primordial non-Gaussianity, scale-dependent bias, and the bispectrum of galaxies

classification astro-ph.CO
keywords biasgalaxybispectrumnon-gaussianityprimordialnon-linearscale-dependentsensitive
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We calculate the bispectrum, B_g(k_1,k_2,k_3), Fourier transform of the three-point function of density peaks (e.g., galaxies), using two different methods: the Matarrese-Lucchin-Bonometto formula and the locality of galaxy bias. The bispectrum of peaks is not only sensitive to that of the underlying matter density fluctuations, but also to the four-point function. For a physically-motivated, local form of primordial non-Gaussianity in the curvature perturbation, we show that the galaxy bispectrum contains five physically distinct pieces: (i) non-linear gravitational evolution, (ii) non-linear galaxy bias, (iii) f_nl, (iv) f_nl^2, and (v) \gnl. While (i), (ii), and a part of (iii) have been derived in the literature, (iv) and (v) are derived in this paper for the first time. Our finding suggests that the galaxy bispectrum is more sensitive to f_nl than previously recognized, and is also sensitive to a new term, g_nl. For a more general form of local-type non-Gaussianity, the coefficient \fnl^2 can be interpreted as \tau_nl, which allows us to test multi-field inflation models. The usual terms from Gaussian initial conditions, have the smallest signals in the squeezed configurations, while the others have the largest signals; thus, we can distinguish them easily. We cannot interpret the effects of f_nl on B_g(k_1,k_2,k_3) as a scale-dependent bias, and thus replacing the linear bias in the galaxy bispectrum with the scale-dependent bias known for the power spectrum results in an incorrect prediction. As the importance of primordial non-Gaussianity relative to the non-linear gravity evolution and galaxy bias increases toward higher redshifts, galaxy surveys probing a high-redshift universe are particularly useful for probing the primordial non-Gaussianity.

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