Constraining the Cosmological Constant from Large-Scale Redshift-Space Clustering
read the original abstract
We show how the cosmological constant can be estimated from redshift surveys at different redshifts, using maximum-likelihood techniques. The apparent redshift-space clustering on large scales (\simgt 20 \himpc) are affected in the radial direction by infall, and curvature influences the apparent correlations in the transverse direction. The relative strengths of the two effects will strongly vary with redshift. Using a simple idealized survey geometry, we compute the smoothed correlation matrix of the redshift-space correlation function, and the Fisher matrix for $\omm$ and $\oml$. These represent the best possible measurement of these parameters given the geometry. We find that the likelihood contours are turning, according to the behavior of the angular-diameter distance relation. The clustering measures from redshift surveys at intermediate-to-high redshifts can provide a surprisingly tight constraint on $\oml$. We also estimate confidence contours for real survey geometries, using the SDSS LRG and QSO surveys as specific examples. We believe that this method will become a practical tool to constrain the nature of the dark energy.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
The impact of our peculiar motion on primordial non-Gaussianity measurements using the LIGER4GAL framework
LIGER4GAL finds that omitting the finger-of-the-observer effect biases f_nl by more than 1 sigma in 40% of realizations for k_min=0.0015 h/Mpc scales.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.