IATE   20350
INSTITUTO DE ASTRONOMIA TEORICA Y EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
What is the best way to measure baryonic acoustic oscillations?
Autor/es:
ARIEL G. SÁNCHEZ; C.M. BAUGH; R. ANGULO
Revista:
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Referencias:
Lugar: EDINBURGO; Año: 2008 vol. 390 p. 1470 - 1490
ISSN:
0035-8711
Resumen:
Oscillations in the baryon-photon fluid prior to recombination imprint
different signatures on the power spectrum and correlation function of
matter fluctuations. The measurement of these features using galaxy
surveys has been proposed as means to determine the equation of state of
the dark energy. The accuracy required to achieve competitive
constraints demands an extremely good understanding of systematic
effects which change the baryonic acoustic oscillation (BAO) imprint. We
use 50 very large volume N-body simulations to investigate the BAO
signature in the two-point correlation function. The location of the BAO
bump does not correspond to the sound horizon scale at the level of
accuracy required by future measurements, even before any dynamical or
statistical effects are considered. Careful modelling of the correlation
function is therefore required to extract the cosmological information
encoded on large scales. We find that the correlation function is less
affected by scale-dependent effects than the power spectrum. We show
that a model for the correlation function proposed by Crocce &
Scoccimarro, based on renormalized perturbation theory, gives an
essentially unbiased measurement of the dark energy equation of state.
This means that information from the large-scale shape of the
correlation function, in addition to the form of the BAO peak, can be
used to provide robust constraints on cosmological parameters. The
correlation function therefore provides a better constraint on the
distance scale (~50 per cent smaller errors with no systematic bias)
than the more conservative approach required when using the power
spectrum (i.e. which requires amplitude and long-wavelength shape
information to be discarded).

