Redshift-Space Distortions with the Halo Occupation Distribution I: Numerical Simulations

Abstract

We show how redshift-space distortions of the galaxy correlation function or power spectrum can constrain the matter density parameter Omegam and the linear matter fluctuation amplitude sigma8. We improve on previous treatments by adopting a fully non-linear description of galaxy clustering and bias, which allows us to break parameter degeneracies by combining large-scale and small- scale distortions. We consider different combinations of Omegam and sigma8 and find parameters of the galaxy halo occupation distribution (HOD) that yield nearly identical galaxy correlation functions in real space. We use these HOD parameters to populate the dark matter halos of large N-body simulations, from which we measure redshift-space distortions on small and large scales. We include a velocity bias parameter alphav that allows the velocity dispersions of satellite galaxies in halos to be systematically higher or lower than those of dark matter. Large-scale distortions are determined by the parameter combination beta = Omegam0.6/bg, where bg is the galaxy bias, in agreement with linear theory. However, linear theory does not accurately describe the distortions themselves on scales accessible to our simulations. We provide fitting formulas to estimate beta from the redshift-space correlation function or power spectrum, and we show that these formulas are significantly more accurate than those in the existing literature. On small scales, the ``finger-of-god'' distortions at projected separations ~0.1 Mpc/h depend on Omegam*alphav2 but are independent of sigma8, while at intermediate separations they depend on sigma8 as well. One can thus use redshift-space distortions over a wide range of scales to separately determine Omegam, sigma8, and alphav. (Abridged)

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