4.7 Article

Redshifting rings of power

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 68, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.68.063004

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The cosmic microwave background (CMB) has provided a precise template for features in the linear power spectrum: the matter-radiation turnover, sound horizon drop, and acoustic oscillations. In a two-dimensional power spectrum in redshift and angular space, the features appear as distorted rings, and yield simultaneous, purely geometric, measures of the Hubble parameter H(z) and angular diameter distance D-A(z) via an absolute version of the Alcock-Paczynski test. Employing a simple Fisher matrix tool, we explore how future surveys can exploit these rings of power for dark energy studies. High-z CMB determinations of H and D-A are best complemented at moderate to low redshift (zless than or similar to0.5) with a population of objects that are at least as abundant as clusters of galaxies. We find that a sample similar to that of the ongoing SDSS luminous red galaxy survey can achieve statistical errors at the similar to5% level for D-A(z) and H(z) in several redshift bins. This, in turn, implies errors of sigma(w)=0.03-0.05 for a constant dark energy equation of state in a flat universe. Deep galaxy cluster surveys such as the planned South Pole Telescope survey can extend this test out to zsimilar to1 or as far as redshift follow-up is available. We find that the expected constraints are at the sigma(w)=0.04-0.08 level, comparable to those of galaxies and complementary in redshift coverage.

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