Bibcode
López-Corredoira, M.; Sylos Labini, F.; Betancort-Rijo, J. E.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 513, id.A3
Advertised on:
4
2010
Journal
Citations
26
Refereed citations
25
Description
Aims: Several authors have claimed to detect a significant
cross-correlation between microwave WMAP anisotropies and the SDSS
galaxy distribution. We repeat these analyses to determine the different
cross-correlation uncertainties caused by re-sampling errors and
field-to-field fluctuations. The first type of error concerns
overlapping sky regions, while the second type concerns non-overlapping
sky regions. Methods: To measure the re-sampling errors, we use
bootstrap and jack-knife techniques. For the field-to-field
fluctuations, we use three methods: 1) evaluation of the dispersion in
the cross-correlation when correlating separated regions of WMAP with
the original region of SDSS; 2) use of mock Monte Carlo WMAP maps; 3) a
new method (developed in this article), which measures the error as a
function of the integral of the product of the self-correlations for
each map. Results: The average cross-correlation for b > 30
deg is significantly stronger than the re-sampling errors - both the
jack-knife and bootstrap techniques provide similar results - but it is
of the order of the field-to-field fluctuations. This is confirmed by
the cross-correlation between anisotropies and galaxies in more than the
half of the sample being null within re-sampling errors.
Conclusions: Re-sampling methods underestimate the errors.
Field-to-field fluctuations dominate the detected signals. The ratio of
signal to re-sampling errors is larger than unity in a way that strongly
depends on the selected sky region. We therefore conclude that there is
no evidence yet of a significant detection of the integrated Sachs-Wolfe
(ISW) effect. Hence, the value of Ω_Λ ≈ 0.8 obtained by
the authors who assumed they were observing the ISW effect would appear
to have originated from noise analysis.
Related projects
Morphology and dynamics of the Milky Way
This project consists of two parts, each differentiated but both complementary: morphology and dynamics. Detailed study of the morphology of the Milky Way pretends to provide a data base for the stellar distribution in the most remote and heavily obscured regions of our Galaxy, through the development of semiempirical models based on the
Martín
López Corredoira