courses:ast403:two-point-correlation-function
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| ====== Two-point Correlation Function ====== | ====== Two-point Correlation Function ====== | ||
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| + | To extract the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) signal from a survey of millions of galaxies, cosmologists need a robust statistical tool to measure how those galaxies cluster together. The primary tool for this is the **two-point correlation function**, denoted as $\xi(r)$. | ||
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| + | Fundamentally, | ||
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| + | ===== Mathematical Definition ====== | ||
| + | Imagine a Universe with a mean galaxy number density of $\bar{n}$. If we randomly drop two infinitesimal volume elements, $dV_1$ and $dV_2$, separated by a distance $r$, the probability $dP$ of finding one galaxy in $dV_1$ and another in $dV_2$ is given by: | ||
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| + | $$dP = \bar{n}^2 [1 + \xi(r)] dV_1 dV_2$$ | ||
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| + | If $\xi(r) = 0$: The galaxies are distributed completely randomly (a Poisson distribution). The probability is just $\bar{n}^2 dV_1 dV_2$. \\ | ||
| + | If $\xi(r) > 0$: The galaxies are clustered. You are more likely to find a pair of galaxies at this separation than you would by chance. Gravity naturally drives $\xi(r)$ to be positive at small scales.\\ | ||
| + | If $\xi(r) < 0$: The galaxies are anti-correlated. You are less likely to find a pair at this distance than in a random distribution (e.g., due to vast cosmic voids). | ||
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| + | ===== Practical Estimation: The Landy-Szalay Estimator ===== | ||
| + | In practice, cosmologists do not have an infinite Universe to measure; they have a finite survey with complex boundaries, varying observation depths, and instrumental artifacts. | ||
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| + | To calculate $\xi(r)$ from real data, observers generate a " | ||
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| + | The standard method used in modern cosmology is the **Landy-Szalay estimator**: | ||
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| + | $$\hat{\xi}(r) = \frac{DD(r) - 2DR(r) + RR(r)}{RR(r)}$$ | ||
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| + | Where: | ||
| + | * $DD(r)$ is the number of **Data-Data** pairs separated by distance $r$. | ||
| + | * $DR(r)$ is the number of **Data-Random** pairs. | ||
| + | * $RR(r)$ is the number of **Random-Random** pairs. | ||
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| + | *(Note: These pair counts are normalized by the total number of possible pairs in each catalog).* | ||
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| + | ===== Relationship to the Power Spectrum $P(k)$ ===== | ||
| + | In cosmology, it is often mathematically convenient to work in Fourier space rather than configuration (real) space. The Fourier transform equivalent of the two-point correlation function is the **Matter Power Spectrum**, $P(k)$, where $k$ is the wavenumber ($k \sim 2\pi/r$). | ||
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| + | For a statistically isotropic Universe (where clustering depends only on the magnitude of the distance $r$, not the direction), the two-point correlation function is the Fourier transform of the power spectrum: | ||
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| + | $$\xi(r) = \frac{1}{2\pi^2} \int_0^{\infty} P(k) \frac{\sin(kr)}{kr} k^2 dk$$ | ||
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| + | Both $\xi(r)$ and $P(k)$ contain the exact same physical information, | ||
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| + | ===== The BAO Peak in the Correlation Function ===== | ||
| + | As established in the previous section, the physics of the early Universe created a spherical shell of baryons at the comoving sound horizon, $r_s \approx 147$ Mpc. | ||
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| + | Because galaxies preferentially form in regions of high dark matter and baryon density, this primordial shell leaves a distinct imprint on the late-time distribution of galaxies. When we plot $\xi(r)$ for millions of galaxies, we see a smooth, exponential decay at small scales (due to standard gravitational clustering), | ||
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| + | This single peak in the 2PCF is the statistical manifestation of the acoustic waves stalling at recombination, | ||
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courses/ast403/two-point-correlation-function.1775109498.txt.gz · Last modified: by shuvo
