In a recent analysis of number counts in the ESP survey Scaramella et al. (1998) claim to find evidence for a cross-over to homogeneity at large scales, and against a fractal behaviour with dimension D ~ 2. In this comment we note firstly that, if such a cross-over exists as described by the authors, the scale characterizing it is ~ 100 /300 h(-1) Mpc. This invalidates the ``standard'' analysis of the same catalogue given elsewhere by the authors which results in a ``correlation length'' of only r_0 = 4 h(-1) Mpc. Furthermore we show that the evidences for a cross-over to homogeneity rely on the choice of cosmological model, and most crucially on the so called K corrections. We show that the D ~ 3 behaviour seen in the K-corrected data of Scaramella et al. is in fact unstable, increasing systematically towards D=4 as a function of the absolute magnitude limit. This behaviour can be quantitatively explained as the effect of unphysical K-correction in the relevant range of red-shift (z ~ 0.1 /0.3). A more consistent interpretation of the number counts is that D is in the range 2 /2.5, depending on the cosmological model, consistent with the continuation of the fractal D~ 2 behaviour observed at scales up to ~ 100 h(-1) Mpc. This implies a smaller K-correction. Given, however, the uncertainty in the effect of intrinsic fluctuations on the number counts statistic, and its sensitivity on these large scales to the uncertain K corrections, we conclude that it is premature to put a definitive constraint on the galaxy distribution using the ESP data alone.

Comment on the paper ``The ESO Slice Project galaxy redshift survey: V. Evidence for a D=3 sample dimensionality''

Montuori M;
1999

Abstract

In a recent analysis of number counts in the ESP survey Scaramella et al. (1998) claim to find evidence for a cross-over to homogeneity at large scales, and against a fractal behaviour with dimension D ~ 2. In this comment we note firstly that, if such a cross-over exists as described by the authors, the scale characterizing it is ~ 100 /300 h(-1) Mpc. This invalidates the ``standard'' analysis of the same catalogue given elsewhere by the authors which results in a ``correlation length'' of only r_0 = 4 h(-1) Mpc. Furthermore we show that the evidences for a cross-over to homogeneity rely on the choice of cosmological model, and most crucially on the so called K corrections. We show that the D ~ 3 behaviour seen in the K-corrected data of Scaramella et al. is in fact unstable, increasing systematically towards D=4 as a function of the absolute magnitude limit. This behaviour can be quantitatively explained as the effect of unphysical K-correction in the relevant range of red-shift (z ~ 0.1 /0.3). A more consistent interpretation of the number counts is that D is in the range 2 /2.5, depending on the cosmological model, consistent with the continuation of the fractal D~ 2 behaviour observed at scales up to ~ 100 h(-1) Mpc. This implies a smaller K-correction. Given, however, the uncertainty in the effect of intrinsic fluctuations on the number counts statistic, and its sensitivity on these large scales to the uncertain K corrections, we conclude that it is premature to put a definitive constraint on the galaxy distribution using the ESP data alone.
1999
COSMOLOGY: LARGE-SCALE STRUCTURE OF UNIVERSE
COSMOLOGY: OBSERVATIONS
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/20156
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 20
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact