The clustering of galaxies in the completed SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation
Spectroscopic Survey: Angular clustering tomography and its cosmological
implications
We investigate the cosmological implications of studying galaxy clustering
using a tomographic approach applied to the final BOSS DR12 galaxy sample,
including both auto- and cross-correlation functions between redshift shells.
We model the signal of the full shape of the angular correlation function,
ω(θ), in redshift bins using state-of-the-art modelling of
non-linearities, bias and redshift-space distortions. We present results on the
redshift evolution of the linear bias of BOSS galaxies, which cannot be
obtained with traditional methods for galaxy-clustering analysis. We also
obtain constraints on cosmological parameters, combining this tomographic
analysis with measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and type Ia
supernova (SNIa). We explore a number of cosmological models, including the
standard ΛCDM model and its most interesting extensions, such as
deviations from w_\rm{DE} = -1, non-minimal neutrino masses, spatial
curvature and deviations from general relativity using the growth-index
γ parametrisation. These results are, in general, comparable to the most
precise present-day constraints on cosmological parameters, and show very good
agreement with the standard model. In particular, combining CMB,
ω(θ) and SNIa, we find a value of w_\rm{DE} consistent with −1
to a precision better than 5\% when it is assumed to be constant in time, and
better than 6\% when we also allow for a spatially-curved Universe.Comment: 21 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication MNRAS. The data used
in this analysis is publicly available at
https://sdss3.org/science/boss_publications.ph