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ABSTRACT The two-point statistics of the cosmic velocity field, measured from galaxy peculiar velocity (PV) surveys, can be used as a dynamical probe to constrain the growth rate of large-scale structures in the Universe. Most works use the statistics on scales down to a few tens of Megaparsecs, while using a theoretical template based on the linear theory. In addition, while the cosmic velocity is volume-weighted, the observable line-of-sight velocity two-point correlation is density-weighted, as sampled by galaxies, and therefore the density–velocity correlation term also contributes, which has often been neglected. These effects are fourth order in powers of the linear density fluctuation ₋⁴, compared to ₋² of the linear velocity correlation function, and have the opposite sign. We present these terms up to ₋⁴ in real space based on the standard perturbation theory, and investigate the effect of non-linearity and the density–velocity contribution on the inferred growth rate fσ8, using N-body simulations. We find that for a next-generation PV survey of volume O (500 \, h^-1 \, Mpc) ³, these effects amount to a shift of fσ8 by ∼10 per cent and is comparable to the forecasted statistical error when the minimum scale used for parameter estimation is r ₌₈₍ = 20 \, h^-1 \, Mpc.
Tonegawa et al. (Fri,) studied this question.