Abstract

It is usually assumed that in the linear regime the two-point correlation function of galaxies contains only a monopole, quadrupole and hexadecapole. Looking at cross-correlations between different populations of galaxies, this turns out not to be the case. In particular, the cross-correlations between a bright and a faint population of galaxies contain also a dipole. In this paper we present the first attempt to measure this dipole. We discuss the four types of effects that contribute to the dipole: relativistic distortions, evolution effect, wide-angle effect and large-angle effect. We show that the first three contributions are intrinsic anti-symmetric contributions that do not depend on the choice of angle used to measure the dipole. On the other hand the large-angle effect appears only if the angle chosen to extract the dipole breaks the symmetry of the problem. We show that the relativistic distortions, the evolution effect and the wide-angle effect are too small to be detected in the LOWz and CMASS sample of the BOSS survey. On the other hand with a specific combination of angles we are able to measure the large-angle effect with high significance. We emphasise that this large-angle dipole does not contain new physical information, since it is just a geometrical combination of the monopole and the quadrupole. However this measurement, which is in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions, validates our method for extracting the dipole from the two-point correlation function and it opens the way to the detection of relativistic effects in future surveys like e.g. DESI.

Highlights

  • The two-point correlation function of galaxies is a powerful cosmological probe

  • We show that the relativistic distortions, the evolution effect and the wide-angle effect are too small to be detected in the LOWz and CMASS sample of the BOSS survey

  • On the other hand with a specific combination of angles we are able to measure the large-angle effect with high significance. We emphasise that this large-angle dipole does not contain new physical information, since it is just a geometrical combination of the monopole and the quadrupole. This measurement, which is in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions, validates our method for extracting the dipole from the two-point correlation function and it opens the way to the detection of relativistic effects in future surveys like e.g. DESI

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The two-point correlation function of galaxies is a powerful cosmological probe. It has been measured with increasing precision in various surveys over the last 50 years. This detection is interesting for two reasons: first it shows that if one wants to measure relativistic effects in future surveys it is crucial not to use this choice of angle, which artificially introduces anti-symmetries in the correlation function. This detection validates our method to measure a dipole in galaxy surveys, since it is in very good agreement with our theoretical prediction for the large-angle effect.

EXTRACTING THE DIPOLE
Relativistic and evolution dipole
Wide-angle and large-angle dipole
MEASUREMENTS OF THE DIPOLE
60 LOWz d Mpc h
Forecasts for future surveys
Comparison with the estimator zshell
Large-angle dipole in a single population of galaxies
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call