Relativistic and non-Gaussianity contributions to the one-loop power spectrum
DOI10.1088/1475-7516/2020/04/028zbMath1491.83005arXiv1911.04359OpenAlexW3018736978MaRDI QIDQ5068459
Rebeca Martinez-Carrillo, Josué De-Santiago, Juan Carlos Hidalgo, Karim A. Malik
Publication date: 6 April 2022
Published in: Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.04359
Relativistic cosmology (83F05) Oscillation, zeros of solutions, mean value theorems, etc. in context of PDEs (35B05) Spectrum, resolvent (47A10) Einstein's equations (general structure, canonical formalism, Cauchy problems) (83C05) Galactic and stellar structure (85A15) Constrained dynamics, Dirac's theory of constraints (70H45) Gravitational waves (83C35)
Related Items (4)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Large-scale structure of the universe and cosmological perturbation theory
- Galaxy bias and gauges at second order in general relativity
- Primordial non-Gaussianity from the large-scale structure
- Imprints of local lightcone \ projection effects on the galaxy bispectrum. Part II
- Non-linear general relativistic effects in the observed redshift
- Non-Gaussianities due to relativistic corrections to the observed galaxy bispectrum
- Higher order relativistic galaxy number counts: dominating terms
- A general relativistic signature in the galaxy bispectrum: the local effects of observing on the lightcone
- Relativistic cosmological large scale structures at one-loop
- The galaxy bias at second order in general relativity with non-Gaussian initial conditions
- Detecting the relativistic galaxy bispectrum
- From matter to galaxies: general relativistic bias for the one-loop bispectrum
- Galaxy number counts at second order: an independent approach
- The Primordial Density Perturbation
- A general proof of the conservation of the curvature perturbation
- General relativistic effects in the galaxy bias at second order
- General Relativity
This page was built for publication: Relativistic and non-Gaussianity contributions to the one-loop power spectrum