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Showing votes from 2015-12-11 12:30 to 2015-12-15 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 12th, 10:30 am.
It is usually assumed that in the linear regime the two-point correlation function of galaxies contains only a monopole, quadrupole and hexadecapole. Looking at cross-correlations between different populations of galaxies, this turns out not to be the case. In particular, the cross-correlations between a bright and a faint population of galaxies contain also a dipole. In this paper we present the first measurement of this dipole. We discuss the three types of effects that contribute to the dipole: relativistic distortions, evolution effects and wide-angle effects. We show that the relativistic distortions and the evolution effects are too small to be detected in the LOWz and CMASS sample of the BOSS survey. We discuss the convention-dependent nature of the wide-angle effect and we show that with the appropriate choice of kernel, a particular version of the wide-angle effect (that we call large-angle effect) can be significantly enhanced. We measure this effect in the dipole with a signal-to-noise of 50, which is as good as the one of the monopole. We emphasise that the large-angle dipole does not contain new statistical information, since it is just a geometrical combination of the monopole and the quadrupole. However it is conceivable that it is sensitive to different systematics. Donate to arXiv