4.7 Article

The local hole revealed by galaxy counts and redshifts

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 437, Issue 3, Pages 2146-2162

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stt2024

Keywords

methods: analytical; galaxies: general; Local Group; large-scale structure of Universe; infrared: galaxies

Funding

  1. STFC
  2. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  3. National Science Foundation
  4. US Department of Energy Office of Science
  5. University of Arizona
  6. Brookhaven National Laboratory
  7. University of Cambridge
  8. Carnegie Mellon University
  9. University of Florida
  10. Harvard University
  11. Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias
  12. Johns Hopkins University
  13. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  14. Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
  15. Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics
  16. New Mexico State University
  17. New York University
  18. Ohio State University
  19. Pennsylvania State University
  20. University of Portsmouth
  21. Princeton University
  22. University of Tokyo
  23. University of Utah
  24. Vanderbilt University
  25. University of Virginia
  26. University of Washington
  27. Yale University
  28. STFC (UK)
  29. ARC (Australia)
  30. AAO
  31. STFC [ST/I001573/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  32. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/I001573/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The redshifts of approximate to 250 000 galaxies are used to study the local hole and its associated peculiar velocities. The sample, compiled from the 6dF Galaxy Redshift Survey and Sloan Digital Sky Survey, provides wide sky coverage to a depth of approximate to 300 h(-1) Mpc. We have therefore examined K- and r-limited galaxy redshift distributions and number counts to map the local density field. Comparing observed galaxy n(z) distributions to homogeneous models in three large regions of the high-latitude sky, we find evidence for underdensities ranging from approximate to 4-40 per cent in these regions to depths of approximate to 150 h(-1) Mpc with the deepest underdensity being over the southern Galactic cap. Using the Galaxy and Mass Assembly survey, we then establish the normalization of galaxy counts at fainter magnitudes and thus confirm that the underdensity over all three fields at K < 12.5 is approximate to 15 +/- 3 per cent. Finally, we further use redshift catalogues to map sky-averaged peculiar velocities over the same areas using the average redshift-magnitude, (z) over bar (m), technique of Soneira. After accounting for the direct effect of the large-scale structure on (z) over bar (m) we can then search for peculiar velocities. Taking all three regions into consideration, the data reject at the approximate to 4 Sigma level the idea that we have recovered the cosmic microwave background rest frame in the volume probed. We therefore conclude that there is some consistent evidence from both counts and Hubble diagrams for a 'local hole' with an approximate to 150 h(-1) Mpc underdensity that deeper counts and redshifts in the northern Galactic cap suggest may extend to approximate to 300 h(-1) Mpc.

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