Abstract

This paper investigates whether nonlinear gravitational instability can account for the clustering of galaxies on large and small scales, and for the evolution of clustering with epoch. No CDM-like spectrum is consistent with the shape of the observed nonlinear spectrum. Unbiased low-density models greatly overpredict the small-scale correlations; high-density models would require a bias which does not vary monotonically with scale. The true linear power spectrum contains a primordial feature at $k\simeq 0.1 \hompc$, and must break quite abruptly to an effective slope of $n\ls -2.3$ on smaller scales This empirical fluctuation spectrum also fits the CFRS data on the evolution of clustering, provided the universe is open with $\Omega\simeq 0.3$. Only this case explains naturally how the small-scale spectrum can evolve at the observed rate while retaining the same power-law index. An unbiased open model also matches correctly the large-scale COBE data, and offers an attractively simple picture for the phenomenology of galaxy clustering.

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