201. The VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS): Reconstruction of the redshift-space galaxy density field
- Author
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Granett, B. R., Branchini, E., Guzzo, L., Abbas, U., Adami, C., Arnouts, S., Bel, J., Bolzonella, M., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Coupon, J., Cucciati, O., Davidzon, I., De Lucia, G., de la Torre, S., Fritz, A., Franzetti, P., Fumana, M., Garilli, B., Ilbert, O., Iovino, A., Krywult, J., Brun, V. Le, Fèvre, O. Le, Maccagni, D., Małek, K., Marulli, F., McCracken, H. J., Polletta, M., Pollo, A., Scodeggio, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tojeiro, R., Vergani, D., Zanichelli, A., Burden, A., Di Porto, C., Marchetti, A., Marinoni, C., Mellier, Y., Moutard, T., Moscardini, L., Nichol, R. C., Peacock, J. A., Percival, W. J., and Zamorani, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims. Using the VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS) we aim to jointly estimate the key parameters that describe the galaxy density field and its spatial correlations in redshift space. Methods. We use the Bayesian formalism to jointly reconstruct the redshift-space galaxy density field, power spectrum, galaxy bias and galaxy luminosity function given the observations and survey selection function. The high-dimensional posterior distribution is explored using the Wiener filter within a Gibbs sampler. We validate the analysis using simulated catalogues and apply it to VIPERS data taking into consideration the inhomogeneous selection function. Results. We present joint constraints on the anisotropic power spectrum as well as the bias and number density of red and blue galaxy classes in luminosity and redshift bins as well as the measurement covariances of these quantities. We find that the inferred galaxy bias and number density parameters are strongly correlated although these are only weakly correlated with the galaxy power spectrum. The power spectrum and redshift-space distortion parameters are in agreement with previous VIPERS results with the value of the growth rate $f\sigma_8 = 0.38$ with 18% uncertainty at redshift 0.7., Comment: Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2015
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