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Detection of the large-scale tidal field with galaxy multiplet alignment in the DESI Y1 spectroscopic survey

Authors :
Lamman, Claire
Eisenstein, Daniel
Forero-Romero, Jaime E.
Aguilar, Jessica Nicole
Ahlen, Steven
Bailey, Stephen
Bianchi, Davide
Brooks, David
Claybaugh, Todd
de la Macorra, Axel
Doel, Peter
Ferraro, Simone
Font-Ribera, Andreu
Gaztañaga, Enrique
Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A
Gutierrez, Gaston
Honscheid, Klaus
Howlett, Cullan
Kremin, Anthony
Lambert, Andrew
Landriau, Martin
Guillou, Laurent Le
Levi, Michael E.
Meisner, Aaron
Miquel, Ramon
Moustakas, John
Newman, Jeffrey A.
Niz, Gustavo
Prada, Francisco
Pérez-Ràfols, Ignasi
Ross, Ashley J.
Rossi, Graziano
Sanchez, Eusebio
Schubnell, Michael
Sprayberry, David
Tarlé, Gregory
Vargas-Magaña, Mariana
Weaver, Benjamin Alan
Zou, Hu
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We explore correlations between the orientations of small galaxy groups, or "multiplets", and the large-scale gravitational tidal field. Using data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Y1 survey, we detect the intrinsic alignment (IA) of multiplets to the galaxy-traced matter field out to separations of 100 Mpc/h. Unlike traditional IA measurements of individual galaxies, this estimator is not limited by imaging of galaxy shapes and allows for direct IA detection beyond redshift z = 1. Multiplet alignment is a form of higher-order clustering, for which the scale-dependence traces the underlying tidal field and amplitude is a result of small-scale (< 1 Mpc/h) dynamics. Within samples of bright galaxies (BGS), luminous red galaxies (LRG) and emission-line galaxies (ELG), we find similar scale-dependence regardless of intrinsic luminosity or colour. This is promising for measuring tidal alignment in galaxy samples that typically display no intrinsic alignment. DESI's LRG mock galaxy catalogues created from the AbacusSummit N-body simulations produce a similar alignment signal, though with a 33% lower amplitude at all scales. An analytic model using a non-linear power spectrum (NLA) only matches the signal down to 20 Mpc/h. Our detection demonstrates that galaxy clustering in the non-linear regime of structure formation preserves an interpretable memory of the large-scale tidal field. Multiplet alignment complements traditional two-point measurements by retaining directional information imprinted by tidal forces, and contains additional line-of-sight information compared to weak lensing. This is a more effective estimator than the alignment of individual galaxies in dense, blue, or faint galaxy samples.<br />Comment: For an accessible summary of this paper, see https://cmlamman.github.io/doc/multipletIA_summary.pdf

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2408.11056
Document Type :
Working Paper