Skewness and kurtosis as indicators of non-Gaussianity in galactic foreground maps
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2015:11 (2015) 019-019
The morphology of the Anomalous Microwave Emission in the Planck 2015 data release
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2015:08 (2015) 029-029
Clustering properties of the CatWISE2020 quasar catalogue and their impact on the cosmic dipole anomaly
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP)
Abstract:
The cosmic dipole anomaly -- the observation of a significant mismatch between the dipole observed in the matter distribution and that expected given the kinematic interpretation of the cosmic microwave background dipole -- poses a serious challenge to the Cosmological Principle upon which the standard model of cosmology rests. Measurements of the dipole in a given sample crucially depend on having control over other large-scale power so as to avoid biases, in particular those potentially caused by correlations among multipoles during fitting, and those by local source clustering. Currently, the most powerful catalogue that exhibits the cosmic dipole anomaly is the sample of 1.6 million mid-infrared quasars derived from CatWISE2020. We therefore analyse clustering properties of this catalogue by performing an inference analysis of large-scale multipoles in real space, and by computing its angular power spectrum on small scales to test for convergence with LCDM. After accounting for the known trend of the quasar number counts with ecliptic latitude, we find that any other large-scale power is consistent with noise, find no evidence for the presence of an octupole ( ) in the data, and quantify the clustering dipole's proportion to be marginal. Our results therefore reaffirm the anomalously high dipole in the distribution of quasars.Colloquium: The Cosmic Dipole Anomaly
Reviews of Modern Physics American Physical Society