26 research outputs found
Non-linear Stochastic Galaxy Biasing in Cosmological Simulations
We study the biasing relation between dark-matter halos or galaxies and the
underlying mass distribution, using cosmological -body simulations in which
galaxies are modelled via semi-analytic recipes. The nonlinear, stochastic
biasing is quantified in terms of the mean biasing function and the scatter
about it as a function of time, scale and object properties. The biasing of
galaxies and halos shows a general similarity and a characteristic shape, with
no galaxies in deep voids and a steep slope in moderately underdense regions.
At \sim 8\hmpc, the nonlinearity is typically \lsim 10 percent and the
stochasticity is a few tens of percent, corresponding to percent
variations in the cosmological parameter . Biasing
depends weakly on halo mass, galaxy luminosity, and scale. The time evolution
is rapid, with the mean biasing larger by a factor of a few at
compared to , and with a minimum for the nonlinearity and stochasticity at
an intermediate redshift. Biasing today is a weak function of the cosmological
model, reflecting the weak dependence on the power-spectrum shape, but the time
evolution is more cosmology-dependent, relecting the effect of the growth rate.
We provide predictions for the relative biasing of galaxies of different type
and color, to be compared with upcoming large redshift surveys. Analytic models
in which the number of objects is conserved underestimate the evolution of
biasing, while models that explicitly account for merging provide a good
description of the biasing of halos and its evolution, suggesting that merging
is a crucial element in the evolution of biasing.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures, submitted to MNRA
Evidence for a Positive Cosmological Constant from Flows of Galaxies and Distant Supernovae
Recent observations of high-redshift supernovae seem to suggest that the
global geometry of the Universe may be affected by a `cosmological constant',
which acts to accelerate the expansion rate with time. But these data by
themselves still permit an open universe of low mass density and no
cosmological constant. Here we derive an independent constraint on the lower
bound to the mass density, based on deviations of galaxy velocities from a
smooth universal expansion. This constraint rules out a low-density open
universe with a vanishing cosmological constant, and together the two favour a
nearly flat universe in which the contributions from mass density and the
cosmological constant are comparable. This type of universe, however, seems to
require a degree of fine tuning of the initial conditions that is in apparent
conflict with `common wisdom'.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure. Slightly revised version. Letter to Natur
The velocity function in the local environment from LCDM and LWDM constrained simulations
Using constrained simulations of the local Universe for generic cold dark
matter and for 1keV warm dark matter, we investigate the difference in the
abundance of dark matter halos in the local environment. We find that the mass
function within 20 Mpc/h of the Local Group is ~2 times larger than the
universal mass function in the 10^9-10^13 M_odot/h mass range. Imposing the
field of view of the on-going HI blind survey ALFALFA in our simulations, we
predict that the velocity function in the Virgo-direction region exceeds the
universal velocity function by a factor of 3. Furthermore, employing a scheme
to translate the halo velocity function into a galaxy velocity function, we
compare the simulation results with a sample of galaxies from the early catalog
release of ALFALFA. We find that our simulations are able to reproduce the
velocity function in the 80-300 km/s velocity range, having a value ~10 times
larger than the universal velocity function in the Virgo-direction region. In
the low velocity regime, 35-80 km/s, the warm dark matter simulation reproduces
the observed flattening of the velocity function. On the contrary, the
simulation with cold dark matter predicts a steep rise in the velocity function
towards lower velocities; for V_max=35 km/s, it forecasts ~10 times more
sources than the ones observed. If confirmed by the complete ALFALFA survey,
our results indicate a potential problem for the cold dark matter paradigm or
for the conventional assumptions about energetic feedback in dwarf galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey: Evolution of the non-linear galaxy bias up to z=1.5
We present the first measurements of the Probability Distribution Function
(PDF) of galaxy fluctuations in the VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey (VVDS) cone, covering
0.4x0.4 deg between 0.4<z<1.5. The second moment of the PDF, i.e. the rms
fluctuations of the galaxy density field, is with good approximation constant
over the full redshift baseline investigated: we find that, in redshift space,
sigma_8 for galaxies brighter than M=-20+5log h has a mean value of 0.94\pm0.07
in the redshift interval 0.7<z<1.5. The third moment, i.e. the skewness,
increases with cosmic time: we find that the probability of having underdense
regions is greater at z~0.7 than it was at z~1.5. By comparing the PDF of
galaxy density contrasts with the theoretically predicted PDF of mass
fluctuations we infer the redshift-, density-, and scale-dependence of the
biasing function b(z, \delta, R) between galaxy and matter overdensities up to
redshift z=1.5. Our results can be summarized as follows: i) the galaxy bias is
an increasing function of redshift: evolution is marginal up to z~0.8 and more
pronounced for z>0.8; ii) the formation of bright galaxies is inhibited below a
characteristic mass-overdensity threshold whose amplitude increases with
redshift and luminosity; iii) the biasing function is non linear in all the
redshift bins investigated with non-linear effects of the order of a few to 10%
on scales >5Mpc.Comment: 30 pages, 17 figs, Accepted by A&
The density field of the 10k zCOSMOS galaxies
We use the current sample of ~10,000 zCOSMOS spectra of sources selected with
I(AB) < 22.5 to define the density field out to z~1, with much greater
resolution in the radial dimension than has been possible with either
photometric redshifts or weak lensing. We apply new algorithms that we have
developed (ZADE) to incorporate objects not yet observed spectroscopically by
modifying their photometric redshift probability distributions using the
spectroscopic redshifts of nearby galaxies. This strategy allows us to probe a
broader range of galaxy environments and reduce the Poisson noise in the
density field. The reconstructed overdensity field of the 10k zCOSMOS galaxies
consists of cluster-like patterns surrounded by void-like regions, extending up
to z~1. Some of these structures are very large, spanning the ~50 Mpc/h
transverse direction of the COSMOS field and extending up to Delta z~0.05 in
redshift. We present the three dimensional overdensity maps and compare the
reconstructed overdensity field to the independently identified virialised
groups of galaxies and clusters detected in the visible and in X-rays. The
distribution of the overdense structures is in general well traced by these
virialised structures. A comparison of the large scale structures in the
zCOSMOS data and in the mock catalogues reveals an excellent agreement between
the fractions of the volume enclosed in structures of all sizes above a given
overdensity between the data and the mocks in 0.2<z<1.Comment: 35 pages, 20 figures; submitted to ApJ; the high resolution pdf
available at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/kovac/public/zCOSMO