Local Primordial non-Gaussian Bias from Time Evolution

Primordial non-Gaussianity (PNG) is a signature of fundamental physics in the early universe that is probed by cosmological observations. It is well known that the local type of PNG generates a strong signal in the two-point function of large-scale structure tracers, such as galaxies. This signal, o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Sullivan, James M, Seljak, Uros
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 27.03.2025
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Online AccessGet full text
DOI10.48550/arxiv.2503.21736

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Summary:Primordial non-Gaussianity (PNG) is a signature of fundamental physics in the early universe that is probed by cosmological observations. It is well known that the local type of PNG generates a strong signal in the two-point function of large-scale structure tracers, such as galaxies. This signal, often termed ``scale-dependent bias'' is a generic feature of modulation of gravitational structure formation by a large-scale mode. It is less well-appreciated that the coefficient controlling this signal, $b_{\phi}$, is closely connected to the time evolution of the tracer number density. This correspondence between time evolution and local PNG can be simply explained for a universal tracer whose mass function only depends on peak height, and more generally for non-universal tracers in the separate universe picture, which we validate in simulations. We also describe how to recover the bias of tracers subject to a survey selection function, and perform a simple demonstration on simulated galaxies. Since the local PNG amplitude in $n-$point statistics ($f_{\rm NL}$) is largely degenerate with the coefficient $b_{\phi}$, this proof of concept study demonstrates that galaxy survey data can allow for more optimal and robust extraction of local PNG information from upcoming surveys.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2503.21736