193 research outputs found
OMEGA AND BIASING FROM OPTICAL GALAXIES VERSUS POTENT MASS
The mass density field in the local universe, recovered by the POTENT method
from peculiar velocities of 3000 galaxies, is compared with the density
field of optically-selected galaxies. Both density fields are smoothed with a
Gaussian filter of radius 12 Mpc. Under the assumptions of
gravitational instability and a linear biasing parameter b\sbo between
optical galaxies and mass, we obtain \beta\sbo \equiv \om^{0.6}/b\sbo = 0.74
\pm 0.13. This result is obtained from a regression of POTENT mass density on
optical density after correcting the mass density field for systematic biases
in the velocity data and POTENT method. The error quoted is just the
formal error estimated from the observed scatter in the density--density
scatterplot; it does not include the uncertainty due to cosmic scatter in the
mean density or in the biasing relation. We do not attempt a formal analysis of
the goodness of fit, but the scatter about the fit is consistent with our
estimates of the uncertainties.Comment: Final revised version (minor typos corrected). 13 pages, gzipped tar
file containing LaTeX and figures. The Postscript file is available at
ftp://dust0.dur.ac.uk/pub/mjh/potopt/potopt.ps.Z or (gzipped) at
ftp://xxx.lanl.gov/astro-ph/ps/9501/9501074.ps.gz or via WWW at
http://xxx.lanl.gov/ps/astro-ph/9501074 or as separate LaTeX text and
encapsulated Postscript figures in a compressed tar'd file at
ftp://dust0.dur.ac.uk/pub/mjh/potopt/latex/potopt.tar.
Shellflow. I. The Convergence of the Velocity Field at 6000 km/s
We present the first results from the Shellflow program, an all-sky
Tully-Fisher (TF) peculiar velocity survey of 276 Sb-Sc galaxies with redshifts
between 4500 and 7000 km/s. Shellflow was designed to minimize systematic
errors between observing runs and between telescopes, thereby removing the
possibility of a spurious bulk flow caused by data inhomogeneity. A fit to the
data yields a bulk flow amplitude V_bulk = 70{+100}{-70} km/s (1 sigma error)
with respect to the Cosmic Microwave Background, i.e., consistent with being at
rest. At the 95% confidence level, the flow amplitude is < 300 km/s. Our
results are insensitive to which Galactic extinction maps we use, and to the
parameterization of the TF relation. The larger bulk motion found in analyses
of the Mark III peculiar velocity catalog are thus likely to be due to
non-uniformities between the subsamples making up Mark III. The absence of bulk
flow is consistent with the study of Giovanelli and collaborators and flow
field predictions from the observed distribution of IRAS galaxies.Comment: Accepted version for publication in ApJ. Includes an epitaph for
Jeffrey Alan Willick (Oct 8, 1959 - Jun 18, 2000
Distances from the Correlation between Galaxy Luminosities and Rotation Rates
A large luminosity--linewidth template sample is now available, improved
absorption corrections have been derived, and there are a statistically
significant number of galaxies with well determined distances to supply the
zero point. A revised estimate of the Hubble Constant is H_0=77 +-4 km/s/Mpc
where the error is the 95% probability statistical error. Systematic
uncertainties are potentially twice as large.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures. Invited chapter for the book `Post-Hipparcos
Cosmic Candles', Eds. F. Caputo and A. Heck (Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Dordrecht
The Bulk Motion of Flat Edge-On Galaxies Based on 2MASS Photometry
We report the results of applying the 2MASS Tully-Fisher (TF) relations to
study the galaxy bulk flows. For 1141 all-sky distributed flat RFGC galaxies we
construct J, H, K_s TF relations and find that Kron magnitudes show
the smallest dispersion on the TF diagram. For the sample of 971 RFGC galaxies
with V_{3K} < 18000 km/s we find a dispersion and an
amplitude of bulk flow V= 199 +/-61 km/s, directed towards l=301 degr +/-18
degr, b=-2 degr +/-15 degr. Our determination of low-amplitude coherent flow is
in good agreement with a set of recent data derived from EFAR, PSCz, SCI/SCII
samples. The resultant two- dimensional smoothed peculiar velocity field traces
well the large-scale density variations in the galaxy distributions. The
regions of large positive peculiar velocities lie in the direction of the Great
Attractor and Shapley concentration. A significant negative peculiar velocity
is seen in the direction of Bootes and in the direction of the Local void. A
small positive peculiar velocity (100 -- 150 km/s) is seen towards the
Pisces-Perseus supercluster, as well as the Hercules - Coma - Corona Borealis
supercluster regions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. A&A/2003/3582 accepted 15.05.200
Spatial gradients in the cosmological constant
It is possible that there may be differences in the fundamental physical
parameters from one side of the observed universe to the other. I show that the
cosmological constant is likely to be the most sensitive of the physical
parameters to possible spatial variation, because a small variation in any of
the other parameters produces a huge variation of the cosmological constant. It
therefore provides a very powerful {\em indirect} evidence against spatial
gradients or temporal variation in the other fundamental physical parameters,
at least 40 orders of magnitude more powerful than direct experimental
constraints. Moreover, a gradient may potentially appear in theories where the
variability of the cosmological constant is connected to an anthropic selection
mechanism, invoked to explain the smallness of this parameter. In the Hubble
damping mechanism for anthropic selection, I calculate the possible gradient.
While this mechanism demonstrates the existence of this effect, it is too small
to be seen experimentally, except possibly if inflation happens around the
Planck scale.Comment: 12 page
Large-scale cosmic flows and moving dark energy
Large-scale matter bulk flows with respect to the cosmic microwave background
have very recently been detected on scales 100 Mpc/h and 300 Mpc/h by using two
different techniques showing an excellent agreement in the motion direction.
However, the unexpectedly large measured amplitudes are difficult to understand
within the context of standard LCDM cosmology. In this work we show that the
existence of such a flow could be signaling the presence of moving dark energy
at the time when photons decoupled from matter. We also comment on the relation
between the direction of the CMB dipole and the preferred axis observed in the
quadrupole in this scenario.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. New comments and references included. Final
version to appear in JCA
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