Simulations of Baryon Acoustic Oscillations I: Growth of Large-Scale Density Fluctuations

Abstract

We critically examine how well the evolution of large-scale density perturbations is followed in cosmological N-body simulations. We first run a large volume simulation and perform a mode-by-mode analysis in three-dimensional Fourier space. We show that the growth of large-scale fluctuations significantly deviates from linear theory predictions. The deviations are caused by nonlinear coupling with a small number of modes at largest scales owing to finiteness of the simulation volume. We then develop an analytic model based on second-order perturbation theory to quantify the effect. Our model accurately reproduces the simulation results. For a single realization, the second-order effect appears typically as ``zig-zag'' patterns around the linear-theory prediction, which imprints artificial ``oscillations'' that lie on the real baryon-acoustic oscillations. Although an ensemble average of a number of realizations approaches the linear theory prediction, the dispersions of the realizations remain large even for a large simulation volume of several hundred megaparsecs on a side. For the standard model, the deviations from linear growth rate are as large as 10 percent for a simulation volume with L = 500h-1Mpc and for a bin width in wavenumber of k = 0.005hMpc-1, which are comparable to the intrinsic variance of Gaussian random realizations. We find that the dispersions scales as L-3/2 k-1/2 and that the mean dispersion amplitude can be made smaller than a percent only if we use a very large volume of L > 2h-1Gpc. The finite box size effect needs to be appropriately taken into account when interpreting results from large-scale structure simulations for future dark energy surveys using baryon acoustic oscillations.

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