The Cosmological Principle is part of the foundation that underpins the
standard model of the Universe. In the era of precision cosmology, when stress
tests of the standard model are uncovering various tensions and possible
anomalies, it is critical to check the viability of this Principle. A key test
is the consistency between the kinematic dipoles of the cosmic microwave
background and of the large-scale matter distribution. Results using radio
continuum and quasar samples indicate a rough agreement in the directions of
the two dipoles, but a larger than expected amplitude of the matter dipole. The
resulting tension with the radiation dipole has been estimated at ∼5σ for some cases, suggesting a potential new cosmological tension and a
possible violation of the Cosmological Principle. However, the standard
formalism for predicting the dipole in the 2-dimensional projection of sources
overlooks possible evolution effects in the luminosity function. In fact,
radial information from the luminosity function is necessary for a correct
projection of the 3-dimensional source distribution. Using a variety of current
models of the quasar luminosity function, we show that neglecting redshift
evolution can significantly overestimate the relative velocity amplitude. While
the models we investigate are consistent with each other and with current data,
the dipole derived from these, which depends on derivatives of the luminosity
function, can disagree by more than 3σ. This theoretical systematic bias
needs to be resolved before robust conclusions can be made about a new cosmic
tension.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, 2 table