Bibcode
Sylos Labini, F.; Vasilyev, N. L.; Baryshev, Y. V.; López-Corredoira, M.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 505, Issue 3, 2009, pp.981-990
Advertised on:
10
2009
Journal
Citations
53
Refereed citations
45
Description
Aims: One of the most striking features predicted by standard models of
galaxy formation is the presence of anti-correlations in the matter
distribution on large enough scales (r > r_c). Simple arguments show
that the location of the length scale r_c, marking the transition from
positive to negative correlations, is the same for any class of objects
as for the full matter distribution; i.e. it is invariant under biasing.
This scale is predicted by models to be at about the same distance of
the scale signaling the baryonic acoustic oscillation scale
rbao. Methods: We test these predictions in the newest
SDSS galaxy samples where it is possible to measure correlations on ~100
Mpc/h scales both in the main galaxy (MG) and in the luminous red galaxy
(LRG) volume-limited samples. We determine, by using three different
estimators, the redshift-space galaxy two-point correlation function.
Results: We find that, in several MG samples, the correlation
function remains positive on scales >250 Mpc/h, while it should be
negative beyond rc ≈ 120 Mpc/h in the concordance LCDM. In
other samples, the correlation function becomes negative on scales
<50 Mpc/h. To investigate the origin of these differences, we
considered in detail the propagation of errors on the sample density
into the estimation of the correlation function. We conclude that these
are important at large enough separations and that they are responsible
for the observed differences between different estimators and for the
measured sample-to-sample variations in the correlation function. We
show that in the LRG sample the scale corresponding to rbao
cannot be detected because fluctuations in the density fields are too
large in amplitude. Previous measurements in similar samples have
underestimated volume-dependent systematic effects. Conclusions:
We conclude that, in the newest SDSS samples, the large-scale behavior
of the galaxy correlation function is affected by intrinsic errors and
volume-dependent systematic effects that make the detection of
correlations only an estimate of a lower limit of their amplitude,
spatial extension, and statistical errors. We point out that these
results represent an important challenge to LCDM models as they largely
differ from its predictions.