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Probing bulk flow with nearby sne ia data

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-12, 15:34 authored by Stephen Appleby, Arman Shafieloo, Andrew Johnson
We test the isotropy of the local universe using low-redshift supernova data from various catalogs and the nonparametric method of smoothed residuals. Using a recently developed catalog that combines supernova data from various surveys, we show that the isotropic hypothesis of a universe with zero velocity perturbation can be rejected with moderate significance, with p-value ~0.07 out to redshift z < 0.045. We estimate the direction of maximal anisotropy on the sky for various preexisting catalogs and show that it remains relatively unaffected by the light-curve fitting procedure. However, the recovered direction is biased by the underlying distribution of data points on the sky. We estimate both the uncertainty and bias in the direction by creating mock data containing a randomly oriented bulk flow and using our method to reconstruct its direction. After correcting for this bias effect, we infer the direction of maximum anisotropy as (b, ℓ) = (20°, 276°) ± (12°, 29°) in galactic coordinates. Finally, we compare the anisotropic signal in the data to mock realizations in which large-scale velocity perturbations are consistently accounted for at the level of linear perturbation theory. We show that including the effect of the velocity perturbation in our mock catalogs degrades the significance of the anisotropy considerably, with p-value increasing to ~0.29. One can conclude from our analysis that there is a moderate deviation from isotropy in the supernova data, but the signal is consistent with a large-scale bulk velocity expected within

Funding

CE110001020:ARC

History

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PDF (Published version)

ISSN

0004-637X

Journal title

Astrophysical Journal

Volume

801

Issue

2

Article number

article no. 76

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2015 The American Astronomical Society. The published version is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher and can be also be located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/801/2/76.

Language

eng

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