Back to Search Start Over

DESI Peculiar Velocity Survey -- Fundamental Plane

Authors :
Said, Khaled
Howlett, Cullan
Davis, Tamara
Lucey, John
Saulder, Christoph
Douglass, Kelly
Kim, Alex G.
Kremin, Anthony
Ross, Caitlin
Aldering, Greg
Aguilar, Jessica Nicole
Ahlen, Steven
BenZvi, Segev
Bianchi, Davide
Brooks, David
Claybaugh, Todd
Dawson, Kyle
de la Macorra, Axel
Dey, Biprateep
Doel, Peter
Fanning, Kevin
Ferraro, Simone
Font-Ribera, Andreu
Forero-Romero, Jaime E.
Gaztañaga, Enrique
Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A
Guy, Julien
Honscheid, Klaus
Kehoe, Robert
Kisner, Theodore
Lambert, Andrew
Landriau, Martin
Guillou, Laurent Le
Manera, Marc
Meisner, Aaron
Miquel, Ramon
Moustakas, John
Muñoz-Gutiérrez, Andrea
Myers, Adam
Nie, Jundan
Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie
Percival, Will
Prada, Francisco
Rossi, Graziano
Sanchez, Eusebio
Schlegel, David
Schubnell, Michael
Silber, Joseph Harry
Sprayberry, David
Tarlé, Gregory
Magana, Mariana Vargas
Weaver, Benjamin Alan
Wechsler, Risa
Zhou, Zhimin
Zou, Hu
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Peculiar Velocity Survey aims to measure the peculiar velocities of early and late type galaxies within the DESI footprint using both the Fundamental Plane and Tully-Fisher relations. Direct measurements of peculiar velocities can significantly improve constraints on the growth rate of structure, reducing uncertainty by a factor of approximately 2.5 at redshift 0.1 compared to the DESI Bright Galaxy Survey's redshift space distortion measurements alone. We assess the quality of stellar velocity dispersion measurements from DESI spectroscopic data. These measurements, along with photometric data from the Legacy Survey, establish the Fundamental Plane relation and determine distances and peculiar velocities of early-type galaxies. During Survey Validation, we obtain spectra for 6698 unique early-type galaxies, up to a photometric redshift of 0.15. 64\% of observed galaxies (4267) have relative velocity dispersion errors below 10\%. This percentage increases to 75\% if we restrict our sample to galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts below 0.1. We use the measured central velocity dispersion, along with photometry from the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys, to fit the Fundamental Plane parameters using a 3D Gaussian maximum likelihood algorithm that accounts for measurement uncertainties and selection cuts. In addition, we conduct zero-point calibration using the absolute distance measurements to the Coma cluster, leading to a value of the Hubble constant, $H_0 = 76.05 \pm 0.35$(statistical) $\pm 0.49$(systematic FP) $\pm 4.86$(statistical due to calibration) $\mathrm{km \ s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}}$. This $H_0$ value is within $2\sigma$ of Planck Cosmic Microwave Background results and within $1\sigma$, of other low redshift distance indicator-based measurements.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. Submitted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2408.13842
Document Type :
Working Paper