301 research outputs found
H0 Revisited
I reanalyse the Riess et al. (2011, hereafter R11) Cepheid data using the
revised geometric maser distance to NGC 4258 of Humphreys et al. (2013). I
explore different outlier rejection criteria designed to give a reduced
chi-squared of unity and compare the results with the R11 rejection algorithm,
which produces a reduced chi-squared that is substantially less than unity and,
in some cases, to underestimates of the errors on parameters. I show that there
are sub-luminous low metallicity Cepheids in the R11 sample that skew the
global fits of the period-luminosity relation. This has a small but
non-negligible impact on the global fits using NGC 4258 as a distance scale
anchor, but adds a poorly constrained source of systematic error when using the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) as an anchor. I also show that the small Milky Way
(MW) Cepheid sample with accurate parallax measurements leads to a distance to
NGC 4258 that is in tension with the maser distance. I conclude that H0 based
on the NGC 4258 maser distance is H0 = 70.6 +/- 3.3 km/s/Mpc compatible within
1 sigma with the recent determination from Planck for the base six-parameter
LCDM cosmology. If the H-band period-luminosity relation is assumed to be
independent of metallicity and the three distance anchors are combined, I find
H0 = 72.5 +/- 2.5 km/s/Mpc, which differs by 1.9 sigma from the Planck value.
The differences between the Planck results and these estimates of H0 are not
large enough to provide compelling evidence for new physics at this stage.Comment: 14 page
Statistical Inconsistencies in the KiDS-450 Dataset
The Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) has been used in several recent papers to infer
constraints on the amplitude of the matter power spectrum and matter density at
low redshift. Some of these analyses have claimed tension with the Planck
cosmology at the level, perhaps
indicative of new physics. However, Planck is consistent with other low
redshift probes of the matter power spectrum such as redshift space distortions
and the combined galaxy-mass and galaxy-galaxy power spectra. Here we perform
consistency tests of the KiDS data, finding internal tensions for various cuts
of the data at significance. Until these internal
tensions are understood, we argue that it is premature to claim evidence for
new physics from KiDS. We review the consistency between KiDS and other weak
lensing measurements of , highlighting the importance of intrinsic
alignments for precision cosmology.Comment: Comments: 8 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The APM cluster-galaxy cross-correlation function : Constraints on Omega and galaxy bias
(abridged) We estimate the cluster-galaxy cross-correlation function (Xi_cg),
from the APM galaxy and galaxy cluster surveys, both in real space from the
inversion of projected statistics and in redshift space using the galaxy and
cluster redshift samples. The amplitude of Xi_cg is found to be almost
independent of cluster richness. At large separations, r >~5 h^-1 Mpc, Xi_cg
has a similar shape to the galaxy-galaxy and cluster-cluster autocorrelation
functions. Xi_cg in redshift space can be related to the real space Xi_cg by
convolution with an appropriate velocity field model. Here we apply a spherical
collapse model, which we have tested against N-body simulations, finding that
it provides a surprisingly accurate description of the averaged infall velocity
of matter into galaxy clusters. We use this model to estimate beta
(Omega^{0.6}/b) and find that it tends to overestimate the true result in
simulations by only ~10-30%. Application to the APM results yields beta=0.43
with beta < 0.87 at 95% confidence. We also compare the APM Xi_cg and galaxy
autocorrelations to results from popular cosmological models and derive two
independent estimates of the galaxy biasing expected as a function of scale.
Both low and critical density CDM models require anti-biasing by a factor ~2 on
scales r <~ 2 h^-1Mpc and an MDM model is consistent with a constant biasing
factor on all scales. We use the velocity fields predicted from the different
models to distort the APM real space cross-correlation function. Comparison
with the APM redshift space Xi_cg yields an estimate of the value of Omega^0.6
needed in each model. Only the low Omega model is fully consistent with
observations, with MDM marginally excluded at the ~2 sigma level.Comment: Latex (mn.sty), 17 pages, 16 ps figs, submitted to MNRA
The Power Spectrum of Rich Clusters of Galaxies on Large Spatial Scales
We present an analysis of the redshift-space power spectrum, , of rich
clusters of galaxies based on an automated cluster catalogue selected from the
APM Galaxy Survey. We find that can be approximated by a power law,
P(k)\proptok^{n}, with over the wavenumber range
0.04\hr. Over this range of wavenumbers, the APM cluster power
spectrum has the same shape as the power spectra measured for optical and IRAS
galaxies. This is consistent with a simple linear bias model in which different
tracers have the same power spectrum as that of the mass distribution but
shifted in amplitude by a constant biasing factor. On larger scales, the power
spectrum of APM clusters flattens and appears to turn over on a scale k \sim
0.03\hmpcrev. We compare the power spectra estimated from simulated APM
cluster catalogues to those estimated directly from cubical N-body simulation
volumes and find that the APM cluster survey should give reliable estimates of
the true power spectrum at wavenumbers k \simgt 0.02\hmpcrev. These results
suggest that the observed turn-over in the power spectrum may be a real feature
of the cluster distribution and that we have detected the transition to a near
scale-invariant power spectrum implied by observations of anisotropies in the
cosmic microwave background radiation. The scale of the turn-over in the
cluster power spectrum is in good agreement with the scale of the turn-over
observed in the power spectrum of APM galaxies.Comment: 9 pages, 7 ps figures, two style files, submitted to MNRAS. Un-xxx-ed
version available at
http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/research/preprints/aug97/cluspaper.ps.g
On the rotation and clustering of galaxies
The tidal torque theory for the origin of galactic rotation has been investigated using N-body computer simulations. The results show that this process is considerably less efficient than was previously thought, though consistent with recent observations of the rotation of giant elliptical galaxies. Spectroscopic observations of three elliptical galaxies along both major and minor axes are presented. Two galaxies were found to be slowly rotating, inconsistent with rotationally supported oblate spheroids. No convincing evidence for minor axis rotation was found. An investigation of the clustering of particles in Friedmann models of the Universe has been carried out using N-body simulations. The results of these computations have been analysed in terms of the two- and three- point correlation functions and various velocity statistics. It is found that the shapes of the two- and three-point functions are dependent upon the cosmological density parameter Ω, and that the shape of the two-point function is in rough agreement with simple analytic treatments based on the homogeneous spherical cluster model for the collapse of protoclusters. The effects of particle discreteness and two-body relaxation, which are particularly important in the N-body models are examined. The approach is compared to the detailed kinetic theory calculations of Davis and Peebles. The cosmological implications of the results are discussed. Other statistics, such as the multiplicity function are also considered
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