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Scale-dependent bias from an inflationary bispectrum: the effect of a stochastic moving barrier

Abstract

With the advent of large scale galaxy surveys, constraints on primordial non-Gaussianity (PNG) are expected to reach O(fNL)1{\cal O}(f_\text{NL}) \sim 1. In order to fully exploit the potential of these future surveys, a deep theoretical understanding of the signatures imprinted by PNG on the large scale structure of the Universe is necessary. In this paper, we explore the effect of a stochastic moving barrier on the amplitude of the non-Gaussian bias induced by local quadratic PNG. We show that, in the peak approach to halo clustering, the amplitude of the non-Gaussian bias will generally differ from the peak-background split prediction unless the barrier is flat and deterministic. For excursion set peaks with a square-root barrier, which reproduce reasonably well the linear bias b1b_1 and mass function nˉh\bar{n}_\text{h} of SO haloes, the non-Gaussian bias amplitude is 40\sim 40% larger than the peak-background split expectation dlnnˉh/dlnσ8d\ln\bar{n}_\text{h}/d\ln\sigma_8 for haloes of mass 1013h1M\sim 10^{13} {\it h}^{-1}M_\odot at z=0z=0. Furthermore, we argue that the effect of PNG on squeezed configurations of the halo bispectrum differs significantly from that predicted by standard local bias approaches. Our predictions can be easily confirmed, or invalidated, with N-body simulations.Comment: 6 pages. 2 figures. Comments welcome (v2): references added. submitte

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