46 research outputs found

    The Scale of Cosmic Isotropy

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    The most fundamental premise to the standard model of the universe, the Cosmological Principle (CP), states that the large-scale properties of the universe are the same in all directions and at all comoving positions. Demonstrating this theoretical hypothesis has proven to be a formidable challenge. The cross-over scale R_{iso} above which the galaxy distribution becomes statistically isotropic is vaguely defined and poorly (if not at all) quantified. Here we report on a formalism that allows us to provide an unambiguous operational definition and an estimate of R_{iso}. We apply the method to galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 7, finding that R_{iso}\sim 150h^{-1} Mpc. Besides providing a consistency test of the Copernican principle, this result is in agreement with predictions based on numerical simulations of the spatial distribution of galaxies in cold dark matter dominated cosmological models.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted by JCAP. The text matches the published versio

    Time for a consensus conference on pain in neurorehabilitation

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    Gaia Early Data Release 3: acceleration of the solar system from Gaia astrometry

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    Stars and planetary system

    Gaia Early Data Release 3: the Gaia catalogue of nearby stars

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    Stars and planetary system

    Gaia early data release 3: summary of the contents and survey properties (Corrigendum)

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    ERRATUMThis article is an erratum for:[https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202039657]​​​​​​​Instrumentatio

    Gaia early data release 3: structure and properties of the Magellanic Clouds

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    Galaxie

    Gaia Early Data Release 3: the Galactic anticentre

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    Stars and planetary system

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