arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1009.4701 [astro-ph.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Testing the statistical isotropy of large scale structure with multipole vectors

Caroline Zunckel, Dragan Huterer, Glenn D. Starkman

Published 2010-09-23, updated 2011-09-08Version 2

A fundamental assumption in cosmology is that of statistical isotropy - that the universe, on average, looks the same in every direction in the sky. Statistical isotropy has recently been tested stringently using Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) data, leading to intriguing results on large angular scales. Here we apply some of the same techniques used in the CMB to the distribution of galaxies on the sky. Using the multipole vector approach, where each multipole in the harmonic decomposition of galaxy density field is described by unit vectors and an amplitude, we lay out the basic formalism of how to reconstruct the multipole vectors and their statistics out of galaxy survey catalogs. We apply the algorithm to synthetic galaxy maps, and study the sensitivity of the multipole vector reconstruction accuracy to the density, depth, sky coverage, and pixelization of galaxy catalog maps.

Comments: 19 pages, 9 figures, typos fixed and minor changes in v2. Matches the published version
Journal: Phys.Rev.D84:043005,2011
Categories: astro-ph.CO, gr-qc, hep-th
Subjects: 98.70.Vc
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:0902.4066 [astro-ph.CO] (Published 2009-02-24, updated 2009-09-03)
CMB bispectrum from primordial magnetic fields on large angular scales
arXiv:1407.1342 [astro-ph.CO] (Published 2014-07-04, updated 2014-11-30)
A coarse grained perturbation theory for the Large Scale Structure, with cosmology and time independence in the UV
arXiv:1302.0130 [astro-ph.CO] (Published 2013-02-01, updated 2014-03-31)
Symmetries and Consistency Relations in the Large Scale Structure of the Universe