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Physics  2000 

The transition to nonlinearity and new constraints on biasing

DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb05619.x

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Abstract:

We present two new dynamical tests of the biasing hypothesis. The first is based on the amplitude and the shape of the galaxy-galaxy correlation function, $\xi_g(r)$, where $r$ is the separation of the galaxy pair. The second test uses the mean relative peculiar velocity for galaxy pairs, $\vs(r)$. This quantity is a measure of the rate of growth of clustering and it is related to the two-point correlation function for the matter density fluctuations, $\xi(r)$. Under the assumption that galaxies trace the mass ($\xi_g = \xi$), the expected relative velocity can be calculated directly from the observed galaxy clustering. The above assumption can be tested by confronting the expected $\vs$ with direct measurements from velocity-distance surveys. Both our methods are checked against N-body experiments and then compared with the $\xi_g(r)$ and $\vs$ estimated from the {\sc APM} galaxy survey and the Mark III catalogue, respectively. Our results suggest that cosmological density parameter is low, $\Omega_m \approx 0.3$, and that the {\sc APM} galaxies trace the mass at separations $r \ga 5 \Mlu$, where $h$ is the Hubble constant in units of 100 km s$^{-1}$Mpc. The present results agree with earlier studies, based on comparing higher order correlations in the {\sc APM} with weakly non-linear perturbation theory. Both approaches constrain the linear bias factor to be within 20% of unity. If the existence of the feature we identified in the {\sc APM} $\xi_g(r)$ -- the inflection point near $\xi_g = 1$ -- is confirmed by more accurate surveys, we may have discovered gravity's smoking gun: the long awaited ``shoulder'' in $\xi$, generated by gravitational dynamics and predicted by Gott and Rees 25 years ago.

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