Title: The largescale structure of the universe 2
1The large-scale structure of the universe - 2
- Matthew Colless
- The New Cosmology
- Physics Summer School 2003
2Lecture 2 - Outline
- Redshift-space distortions.
- The correlation function and power spectrum.
- Gaussianity and topology.
- Open questions and new surveys.
- LSS cosmology with the 2dF Galaxy Redshift
Survey. - Mass motions - the 6dF Galaxy Survey.
3Redshift-space distortions
zobs ztrue vpec/c where vpec? ?0.6 dr/r
(?0.6/b) dn/n
bias
Real-space
linear
nonlinear
turnaround
Regime
Redshift space
Observer
4Redshift-space distortion of the CF
- Because of peculiar velocities, the redshift
space CF is distorted w.r.t. the real-space CF - In real space the contours of the CF are
circular. - Coherent infall on large scales (in linear
regime) squashes the contours along the line of
sight. - Rapid motions in collapsed structures on small
scales stretch the contours along the line of
sight.
5Distortions and P(k)
- Because of peculiar velocities, the PS in
redshift space, Ps(k) is distorted w.r.t. the PS
in real space, P(k). - Far from the observer (plane- approx.)
Ps(k) (1bmk2)2 P(k)
where b W0.6/b and mk is cosine of Ð
between k and radial l.o.s. (Note Ps depends on
k, not just k, because no longer isotropic.) - The Ð-averaged z-space PS, Ps(k)
(4p)-1 ò Ps(k) dqk ,
is then given by
Ps(k) (1 2/3 b 1/5 b2) P(k) ,
so the ratio of the z-space
and real-space PS (in the linear regime)
constrains b W0.6/b (the mass density, up to
biasing). - With z-survey, measuring Ps(k) not P(k)
- doesnt affect shape analysis (since they are
proportional) - to use distortions for b need P(k) can obtain by
inverting angular PS w(q), or by linearly
evolving the CMB mass PS.
6x(s), x(?,?) and x(r)
- The spatial CF x(r) can be recovered from the
z-space CF x(s) by computing x(s) as a function
of the separations in plane of sky, s, and the
line of sight, p, to obtain x s(s,p). - The projection of x s(s,p) onto the s-axis is
w(s) 2
ò x s(s,p) dp
2 ò x r (s2y2)1/2 dy - For a power-law, x(r) (r/r0)-g , and we have
?(s) w(s)/s
x r(s) G(1/2)G((g-1)/2)/G(g/2)
where G is the standard gamma
function.
7Small scales - x(r)
- On scales lt20 h-1 Mpc x(r) is well-fitted by a
power law x(r) (r/5.4 h-1
Mpc)-1.8 Þ s2(8 Mpc) ? 1.0
(optical) x(r) (r/3.8 h-1 Mpc)-1.6
Þ s2(8 Mpc) ? 0.6 (IR) - This is just a reflection of the
morphology-density relation (E/S0Sp as density
) E/S0s clustered much more strongly than
Sp/Irrs at small scales (lt few Mpc). - Low-L galaxies are more weakly clustered than L
galaxies high-L galaxies are more strongly
clustered.
8Large scales - P(k)
- P(k) is preferred to x(r) on large scales it is
more robust to compute, the covariance between
scales is simpler, and the error analysis is
easier. - Fits to P(k) give G ? 0.2, implying ? ? 0.3 if h
? 0.7, but the turnover in P(k) around 200 h-1
Mpc (the horizon scale at matter-radiation
equality) is not well determined.
- Can reconcile P(k) for IR, optical and radio
galaxies and clusters on scales gt10 h-1 Mpc,
assuming - relative biases bAbellbradiobopticalbIRAS
4.51.91.31 - P(k) shape consistent with G0.25 CDM and COBE
normalisation.
9Measuring b from P(k)
- z-space distortions produce Fingers of God on
small scales and compression along the line of
sight on large scales. - Can get b W0.6/b from the ratio of the z-space
to real-space PS Ps(k)/P(k) (1 2/3 b 1/5
b2) - Or can measure the degree of distortion of x s in
s-p plane from ratio of quadrupole to monopole
P2s(k) 4/3b 4/7b 2
P0s(k) 1 2/3b 1/5b 2 - Estimates of b from P(k) using linear z-space
distortions
- from IR z-surveys b 0.80.2
- from optical z-surveys b 0.50.1
- thus boptical/bIRAS 1.5
10Gaussianity and topology
- On large scales, all the evidence appears
consistent with random phases (Gaussian
fluctuations) on large scales - but this is not
yet compelling. - On small scales, non-linear evolution of the
density field occurs - the 34-point correlation functions are found to
be non-zero Þ non-random phases. - hierarchical scaling appears to relate the
N-point, spherically-averaged correlation
functions
ltxN(V)gt SNltx2(V)gtN-1
as predicted by perturbation
theory for Gaussian initial conditions and
gravitational instability. - Topology use g(n), the genus as function of
density contour g holes - pieces 1
- on small scales, there is a slight meatball
shift w.r.t. Gaussian g(n), as expected from
non-linear evolution - on large scales, this will provide another test
of Gaussianity.
11Open questions in LSS
- What is the shape of the power spectrum?
- what is the nature of the DM?
- what is the value of G Wh?
- Mass and bias
- what is the value of b W0.6/b?
- can we obtain W and b independently of each
other? - what are the relative biases of different galaxy
populations? - Can we check the gravitational instability
paradigm? - Were the initial density fluctuations
random-phase (Gaussian)? - What is the non-linear evolution of the galaxy
and mass distributions? - Can we link galaxy properties (luminosity, mass,
type) to local density and/or large-scale
structure? - which properties are primordial?
- which are contingent on detailed evolution?
12Major new LSS surveys
- Massive surveys at low z (105-106 galaxies ltzgt ?
0.1) - 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey and Sloan Digital Sky
Survey - high-precision LSS and cosmology measure P(k) on
large scales and b from z-space distortions to
give ? and b. - low-z galaxy population F and x as joint
functions of luminosity, type, local density and
star-formation rate - Massive surveys at high redshift (ltzgt ? 0.5-1.0
or higher) - VIMOS and DEIMOS surveys (and others)
- evolution of the galaxy population
- evolution of the large-scale structure
- Mass and motions survey (6dF Galaxy Survey)
- NIR-selected z-survey of local universe, together
with... - measurements of s for 15000 E/S0 galaxies
Þ masses
and distances from Fundamental Plane Þ
density/velocity field to 15000 km/s (150 h-1 Mpc)
13CfA/SSRS z-survey 15000 zs
Earlier large redshift surveys
CfA Survey 15000 zs
Las Campanas Redshift Survey 25000 zs
14Comparison of redshift surveys
2dGRS
152dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
2000 sq.deg. to bJ19.45 250,000 galaxies
Stripsrandom fields 1x108 h-3 Mpc3 Volume in
strips 3x107 h-3 Mpc3
NGP
SGP
NGP 75?x7.5? SGP 75?x15? Random 100x2?Ø
70,000 140,000 40,000
162dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
May 2002 221,283 galaxies
17Fine detail 2-deg NGP slices (1-deg steps)
2dFGRS bJ lt 19.45
SDSS r lt 17.8
18?CDM bias 1
SCDM bias 1
Cosmology by eye!
Observed
SCDM bias 2
?CDM bias 2
19?m ?? ?k ? 1
202dFGRS LSS Cosmology Highlights
- The most precise determination of the large-scale
structure of the galaxy distribution on scales up
to 600 h-1 Mpc. - Detection of acoustic oscillations in the galaxy
distribution due to baryon/photon coupling in the
early universe. - Unambiguous detection of coherent collapse on
large scales, confirming structures grow via
gravitational instability. - Measurements of ? (mean mass density) from the
power spectrum and redshift-space distortions ?
0.29 ? 0.05 - A measurement of the baryon fraction from the
acoustic oscillations in the power spectrum
?b/? 0.15 ? 0.07 - First measurement of galaxy bias parameter b
1.00 ? 0.09 - An new upper limit on the neutrino fraction, ?n/?
lt 0.13, and a limit on the mass of all neutrino
species, mn lt 1.8 eV.
21CDM Model Fits to Power Spectrum
Fit model CDM P(k) (with n1) after convolution
with survey window function. Fit parameters (1)
?mh (2) ?b/?m (3) h (marginalise) Window flattens
P(k) and damps baryon features. Fits limited
to 0.015ltklt0.15.
model P(k)
Non-linear regime
Large errors
Ratio to ?mh0.25 no-baryon CDM model
model P(k) after window convolution
Wavenumber 2?/scale
22Confidence Limits on ? and ?b/?m
23Redshift-Space Correlation Function
- Small ? ? non-linear Finger-of-God effect
- Large ? ? flattening along line of sight due to
coherent infall - Fit to r 8-30 h-1 Mpc gives (after correction
for ltzgt0.15, ltLgt1.4L) ? ?0.6/b 0.47?0.09
and pair-wise vel. dispersion ?p 495 ? 52 km/s - For b ? 1 ? ? ? 0.21
- For ? ? 0.3 ? b ? 1.2
Separation along the line of sight, ? (Mpc/h)
Separation on the sky, ? (Mpc/h)
24Measuring Bias - 2dFGRS CMB
Assume dn/n b dr/r (blinear bias). Then
Pgal(k)b2Pm(k), so can get the bias parameter by
comparing the relative normalizations (s8) of the
mass PS from CMB (linearly evolved to z0) and
the galaxy PS from 2dFGRS.
Do galaxies trace mass?
b b(L) 0.96 0.08
25Cosmology from 2dFGRS CMB
262dFGRSCMB fits - flat cosmology
- Fits assume ?k0 and use CMB 2dFGRS only (no
priors) - Preferred model is scalar-dominated and almost
scale-invariant - Best-fit normalization is ?8 (0.72 ? 0.04)
exp ?
27Constraints on the neutrino mass
P(k) gives an upper limit on the total mass of
all n species
Wn/Wm lt 0.13 ? mn,tot lt 1.8 eV (95
confidence)
Best previous bound
Wn/Wmlt 0.13
Elgaroy et al., 2002, astro-ph/0204152
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30The dark energy equation of state
- Dark energy equation of state w(z)? p/?
- ?(z) ? (1?z)n , n ? 3(1?w)
- cosmological constant has w ? -1 and n ? 0.
- The combined constraint on ?w?, assuming a flat
universe, from the CMB and 2dFGRS power spectra
plus the HST key project H0, is
?w? ? -0.52 (95 c.l.)
2dFGRS CMB
2dFGRS CMB HST
31Clustering/bias variation with luminosity
32Passive (non-starforming) galaxies
33Active (starforming) galaxies
34Power spectrum and galaxy type
Non-linear regime
passive
active
35Redshift-space distortions and galaxy type
Passive ? ?0.6/b 0.46 ? 0.13 ?p
618 ? 50 km s-1
Active ? ?0.6/b 0.54 ? 0.15 ?p
418 ? 50 km s-1
36The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
- Final data release June 2003
- www.mso.anu.edu.au/2dFGRS
37Mass and motions - 6dF Galaxy Survey
- Redshift survey
- sample from 2MASS ( DENIS B Sky Survey)
- cover whole southern sky with bgt10º
- galaxies with Klt13.0 (also Jlt14.0, Ilt15, Blt16.5)
- ? 150,000 galaxies
- Peculiar velocity survey
- volume-limited sample of early-type galaxies with
czlt15,000 km/s
? 15,000
galaxies - measure velocity dispersions, combine with 2MASS
photometry ? Dn-? distances/velocities
386dF observed velocity field (15,000 galaxies)
PSCz predicted velocity field (15,000 galaxies)
39Bulk flows and LSS
- Bulk flow is mean motion of a given volume.
- Bulk flows are due to very large-scale structure.
- Compare the scales at which the mass power
spectrum P(k) contributes most to the rms mass
fluctuation and the rms bulk flow within a
spherical region of radius R - ?(?M/M)2?(R) ? P(k) W2(kR) (dk/2?)3
- ?v2?(R) 4?(H0?0.6)2 ? k-2 P(k) W2(kR) (dk/2?)3
- The bulk flow is dominated by fluctuations in the
mass distribution at smaller k (i.e. larger
scales) than the density field.
40Observed bulk flows
41Cosmological constraints
42The 6dF Galaxy Survey Early Data Release
http//www.mso.anu.edu.au/6dFGS