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Comparison of peculiar velocities of galaxies with their gravitational accelerations (induced by the density field) is one of the methods to constrain the redshift distortion parameter beta=(Omega_m^0.55)/b, where Omega_m is the non-relativistic matt er density parameter and b is the linear bias. In particular, one can use the motion of the Local Group (LG) for that purpose. Its peculiar velocity is known from the dipole component of the cosmic microwave background, whereas its acceleration can be estimated with the use of an all-sky galaxy catalog, from the so-called clustering dipole. At the moment, the biggest dataset of that kind is the Two Micron All Sky Survey Extended Source Catalog (2MASS XSC) containing almost 1 million galaxies and complete up to ~300 Mpc/h. We applied 2MASS data to measure LG acceleration and used two methods to estimate the beta parameter. Both of them yield beta~0.4 with an error of several per cent, which is the most precise determination of this parameter from the clustering dipole to date.
We propose a simple way to estimate the parameter beta = Omega_m^(0.6)/b from three-dimensional galaxy surveys. Our method consists in measuring the relation between the cosmological velocity and gravity fields, and thus requires peculiar velocity me asurements. The relation is measured *directly in redshift space*, so there is no need to reconstruct the density field in real space. In linear theory, the radial components of the gravity and velocity fields in redshift space are expected to be tightly correlated, with a slope given, in the distant observer approximation, by g / v = (1 + 6 beta / 5 + 3 beta^2 / 7)^(1/2) / beta. We test extensively this relation using controlled numerical experiments based on a cosmological N-body simulation. To perform the measurements, we propose a new and rather simple adaptive interpolation scheme to estimate the velocity and the gravity field on a grid. One of the most striking results is that nonlinear effects, including `fingers of God, affect mainly the tails of the joint probability distribution function (PDF) of the velocity and gravity field: the 1--1.5 sigma region around the maximum of the PDF is *dominated by the linear theory regime*, both in real and redshift space. This is understood explicitly by using the spherical collapse model as a proxy of nonlinear dynamics. Applications of the method to real galaxy catalogs are discussed, including a preliminary investigation on homogeneous (volume limited) `galaxy samples extracted from the simulation with simple prescriptions based on halo and sub-structure identification, to quantify the effects of the bias between the galaxy and the total matter distibution, and of shot noise (ABRIDGED).
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