We test the homogeneity of the Universe at z∼0.3 with the Luminous Red
Galaxy (LRG) spectroscopic sample of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. First, the
mean number N(R) of LRGs within completely surveyed LRG-centered spheres of
comoving radius R is shown to be proportional to R3 at radii greater than
R∼70h−1Mpc. The test has the virtue that it does not rely
on the assumption that the LRG sample has a finite mean density; its results
show, however, that there \emph{is} such a mean density. Secondly, the survey
sky area is divided into 10 disjoint solid angular regions and the fractional
rms density variations of the LRG sample in the redshift range 0.2<z<0.35
among these (∼2×107h−3Mpc3) regions is found to be 7
percent of the mean density. This variance is consistent with typical biased
\lcdm models and puts very strong constraints on the quality of SDSS
photometric calibration.Comment: submitted to Ap