Testing the consistency of three-point halo clustering in Fourier and configuration space

Abstract

We compare reduced three-point correlations Q of matter, haloes (as proxies for galaxies) and their cross correlations, measured in a total simulated volume of 100 \ (h-1 Gpc)3, to predictions from leading order perturbation theory on a large range of scales in configuration space. Predictions for haloes are based on the non-local bias model, employing linear (b1) and non-linear (c2, g2) bias parameters, which have been constrained previously from the bispectrum in Fourier space. We also study predictions from two other bias models, one local (g2=0) and one in which c2 and g2 are determined by b1 via an approximately universal relation. Overall, measurements and predictions agree when Q is derived for triangles with (r1r2r3)1/3 60 h-1Mpc, where r1-3 are the sizes of the triangle legs. Predictions for Qmatter, based on the linear power spectrum, show significant deviations from the measurements at the BAO scale (given our small measurement errors), which strongly decrease when adding a damping term or using the non-linear power spectrum, as expected. Predictions for Qhalo agree best with measurements at large scales when considering non-local contributions. The universal bias model works well for haloes and might therefore be also useful for tightening constraints on b1 from Q in galaxy surveys. Such constraints are independent of the amplitude of matter density fluctuation (σ8) and hence break the degeneracy between b1 and σ8, present in galaxy two-point correlations.

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