Title: The Alcock-Paczynski Probe of Cosmology
1The Alcock-Paczynski Probeof Cosmology
- Lyman-? forest, LSS,
- And Cosmic Consistency
Albert Stebbins Fermilab
Dark Energy Workshop Center for Cosmological
Physics University of Chicago 15 December 2001
2The Alcock-Paczynski TestAlcock Paczynski
(1979) An evolution free test for non-zero
cosmological constant Nature 281 358
- There are 2 directly observable measures of the
size of an object expanding w/ cosmological
flow - Angular size
- Radial extent in redshift space
- If such objects are not preferentially aligned
either along or perpendicular to our
line-of-sight then, by requiring no such
preferential alignment, one can determine the
ratio of the conversion factors, angular distance
to physical distance, to that from redshift
distance to physical distance. - i.e. one can determine ?z/??z.
3Observational Fundamentalism
4Different Tests - Different Combinations
- Examples of how these two functions are related
to standard tests - the apparent luminosity of standard candles
- (the K-correction, kz, includes
(1z)4 surface brightness dimming and redshift
of spectrum into /out of observational band) - the cosmological volume element (? of objects)
per unit redshift per unit solid angle - the Alcock-Paczynski test
- N.B. in practice other cosmological dependencies
tend to creep into these tests, e.g. the linear
growth rate of perturbations, or more complicated
things like the star formation rate.
5A-P Just Another Cosmological Test
- As with all such tests one must go to
significant redshift to measure anything
interesting. For zltlt0 you already know what the
answer is. - The AP test at lo-z quickly (zgt0.5) becomes
sensitive to the presence of ?, but only at the
20 level. - It is insensitive to curvature at lo-z, rather
like the SNeIa lz. - At very hi-z it becomes most sensitive to the
curvature at about the 70 level. - At hi-z it is relatively insensitive to ?,
rather like the CMB lpeak test.
6A-P Just The Same Cosmological Test
7Cosmological Consistency
As described, the results of different
cosmological tests are inter-related. Some of
these relationships are axiomatic, e.g.
Other relationship depend on the cosmic
consistency relation, e.g. Which relates
observables from an A-P test and a l-z (e.g.
SNeIa) test to Which probably isnt quite
measurable. However since the right-hand-side is
z-independent one can test cosmic consistency by
requiring that one infers the same ?0 at each z.
8Cosmological Inconsistency?
- These relations hold no matter how weird the dark
energy is! - Violation of an axiomatic relation probably
indicates a measurement error or
mis-interpretation of measurements. - The cosmic consistency relations is a result of
assumptions of the FRW (Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
Cosmology - one of the fundamental tenets upon
which interpretation of cosmological observations
is based. - Violation of cosmic consistency might indicate
- non-FRW geometry i.e. we live in the center of a
spherically symmetric but non-homogeneous
universe (violation of cosmological Copernican
Principle) - non-metric theory for propagation of light
(post-modern tired light) - as we are in a sense
measuring the metric with these tests. - Measurement error or a problem with
interpretation of measurements. - As the relations combine different tests, and as
it is unlikely that errors in one test would
balance errors in another such as to satisfy the
relations, this provides a powerful check of all
tests involved! - It is thus worthwhile to compare the AP test at
the same redshifts as SNeIa
9Alcock-Paczynski Realities
As with all cosmological tests one must overcome
observational hurdles in order to make the test
a useful one.
- Systematics
- Since angular size is measure of physical size
and radial size measure of velocity differences
we do expect that the two are the same - there
can be preferential alignment w.r.t.
line-of-sight i.e. redshift space distortions. - These distortions must be understood and taken
into account. - On small scales 1 Mpc astrophysical objects
have separated from cosmic expansion and have
little to do w/ cosmic expansion (fingers of
God). - On large scales gt20 Mpc (_at_z0) simple linear
theory distortions (Kaiser effect) may suffice.
- Statistics
- If objects were truly round in redshift space
then one need observe only one at each z to
determine ?z/??z. - More generally accuracy is given by ?
ln(?z/??)e/v(8N) where N is the number of
independent objects and e their RMS ellipticity.
N.B. 0 e 1 - Statistical measurement errors decreases
effective N. - this result cribbed from weak lensing theory
10Large Scale Structure Voids, Filaments, etc.
- From galaxy redshift surveys one may identify
structures such as voids (Ryden) or filaments
(Möller Fynbo), measure their shapes and use
these for the AP test - As these are quasi-linear structures the redshift
space distortions are non-trivial to correct for. - At present surveys dense enough to identify
structures are at lo-z where the AP is less
useful. - In the future DEEP and VIRMOS will provide dense
surveys at z1.
SDSS Galaxy Redshift Survey Early DataStoughton
et al. (2001) Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early
Data Releasein preparation
11Large Scale Structure Sparse Sampling
- Sparse surveys efficiently measure the 2-pt
statistics of clustering especially on large
scales where the perturbations are linear. - They are not useful for identifying individual
structures. - e.g. the BRG (Bright Red Galaxy) part of the SDSS
redshift survey, or much of 2DF.
SDSS Galaxy Redshift Survey Early DataStoughton
et al. (2001) Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early
Data Releasein preparation
12Large Scale Structure QSOs
- Or the quasar redshift survey that is part of the
SDSS (Calvão, De Mello Neto, Waga).
SDSS Galaxy Redshift Survey Early DataStoughton
et al. (2001) Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early
Data Releasein preparationSchneider et al.
(2001) The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasar
Catalog I Early Data Release astro-ph/0110629
13Composite Objects ?rp,?
- One may also use statistics of redshift space
clustering in place of shapes of individual
objects. - In particular the redshift space 2-point function
?rp,? ?? ,?z - This is a convenient way of combining all of the
data w/o identifying objects. - One can use this in cases where, say, the galaxy
sampling is too sparse to allow accurate
identification of objects.
SDSS Galaxy Redshift-Space CorrelationZehavi et
al. (2001) Galaxy Clustering in Early SDSS
Redshift Data astro-ph/0106476
14Alcock-Paczynski Redshift Space Distortions
- Redshift space distortions themselves give some
clue as to the cosmological parameters c.f. the
Kaiser effect - Combining the AP test w/ theory for redshift
space distortion (and to some extent bias) one
can obtain a combined constraint on cosmological
parameters (Matsubara Szalay). e.g. for SDSS
Northern survey (Subbarao)
OTHERS FIXED ?m ?? ?b/?m h n ?8 b
Main 3 19 16 4 2 0.5 0.5
BRG 2 4 9 2 1 0.3 0.4
QSO 14 15 76 20 14 5 6
SDSS Parameter EstimationMatsubara Szalay
(2001) Constraining the Cosmological Constant
from Large-Scale Redshift-Space Clustering
astro-ph/0105493
MARGIN- ALIZED ?m ?? ?b/?m b
Main 14 57 51 2
BRG 9 10 33 0.9
QSO 170 75 360 69
15Alcock-Paczynski Redshift Space Distortions
Parameter Estimation for 1. (200h-1 Mpc)3 cube
2. ? ? survey Matsubara Szalay (2001)
Constraining the Cosmological Constant from
Large-Scale Redshift-Space Clustering
astro-ph/0105493
Shot Noise (20h-1 Mpc)3 n0.1, 0.3, 1, 3, 10, 8
16Lyman-? ForestStructure along line-of-sight to
QSOs
Continuum Fitting Systematic!
17The Ly-? Alcock-Paczynski Forest TestMcDonald
Miralda-Escudé (1999) Measuring the Cosmological
Geometry from the Ly? Forest Along Parallel Lines
of Sight Ap.J. 518 24 Hui, Stebbins, Burles
(1999) A Geometrical Test of the Cosmological
Energy Contents Using theLyman-alpha Forest Ap.J
Lett. 511 L5
18The Alcock-Paczynski Ly-? Forest Test
- The quality of the AP test depends on the QSO
separation - Too small
- Just right
- Too large
1919
First Try
In practice one cross-correlates the Ly-?
absorption e-? between the different
lines-of-sight. This can be done in ? space or
its Fourier transform. One expects the
correlation to be near perfect on z-scales larger
than the transverse separation, no correlation on
scales much larger than the separation, with
roughly an exponential falloff.
Alcock-Paczynski Test Applied to QSO Triplet
Burles, Stebbins, Hui (circa 1999, unpublished)
20Ly-? Forest Sensitivity
- McDonald (2001) has performed detailed modeling
of expected SDSS QSOs, comparing w/ simulations
to model redshift space distortions. - With followup spectra (i.e. apart from SDSS
spectroscopy) one can obtain a respectable limit
on ?.
Cosmological Accuracy from SDSS QSOsMcDonald
(2001) Toward a Measurement of the Cosmological
Geometry at z2 Predicting Ly? Forest
Correlations in Three Dimensions, and the
Potential of Future Data Sets astro-ph/0108064
21Conclusions
- Alcock-Paczynski test - yet another cosmological
test. - Redundant with other tests in z ranges where they
overlap. - Implementations have been proposed up to QSO
redshifts (z3) - perhaps further w/ IR
spectroscopy. - No useful applications have yet been carried out.
- For deep redshift surveys - and when combined
with theory of redshift space distortion - can
provide very tight constraints on at a.k.a.
p?. - Probably provides best probe of cosmology at z2
through Ly-? Forest.