The Durham/UKST Galaxy Redshift Survey – III. Large-scale structure via the two-point correlation function |
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Authors: | Ratcliffe,Shanks,Parker,& Fong |
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Affiliation: | Physics Department, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE,;Anglo-Australian Observatory, Coonabarabran, NSW 2357, Australia |
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Abstract: | We have investigated the statistical clustering properties of galaxies by calculating the two-point galaxy correlation function from the optically selected Durham/UKST Galaxy Redshift Survey. This survey is magnitude-limited to b J∼17, contains ∼2500 galaxies sampled at a rate of one-in-three and surveys a ∼4×106 ( h −1 Mpc)3 volume of space. We have empirically determined the optimal method of estimating the two-point correlation function from just such a magnitude-limited survey. Applying our methods to this survey, we find that our redshift-space results agree well with those from previous optical surveys. In particular, we confirm the previously claimed detections of large-scale power out to ∼40 h −1 Mpc scales. We compare with two common models of cosmological structure formation and find that our two-point correlation function has power significantly in excess of the standard cold dark matter model in the 10–30 h −1 Mpc region. We therefore support the observational results of the APM galaxy survey. Given that only the redshift-space clustering can be measured directly, we use standard modelling methods and indirectly estimate the real-space two-point correlation function from the projected two-point correlation function. We then invert this projected correlation function to obtain an estimate of the spatial two-point correlation function in real space. This correlation function in real space has a lower amplitude than that in redshift space, but a steeper slope. |
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Keywords: | surveys galaxies: clusters: general galaxies: general cosmology: observations large-scale structure of Universe. |
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