The ALHAMBRA survey: an empirical estimation of the cosmic variance for merger fraction studies based on close pairs
Abstract
Our goal is to estimate empirically, for the first time, the cosmic variance that affects merger fraction studies based on close pairs. We compute the merger fraction from photometric redshift close pairs with 10h-1 kpc <= rp <= 50h-1 kpc and Dv <= 500 km/s, and measure it in the 48 sub-fields of the ALHAMBRA survey. We study the distribution of the measured merger fractions, that follow a log-normal function, and estimate the cosmic variance sigmav as the intrinsic dispersion of the observed distribution. We develop a maximum likelihood estimator to measure a reliable sigmav and avoid the dispersion due to the observational errors (including the Poisson shot noise term). The cosmic variance of the merger fraction depends mainly on (i) the number density of the populations under study, both for the principal (n1) and the companion (n2) galaxy in the close pair, and (ii) the probed cosmic volume Vc. We find a significant dependence on neither the search radius used to define close companions, the redshift, nor the physical selection (luminosity or stellar mass) of the samples. We provide a parametrisation of the cosmic variance with n1, n2, and Vc, sigmav = 0.48 n1-0.54 Vc-0.48 (n2/n1)-0.37. Thanks to this prescription, future merger fraction studies based on close pairs could account properly for the cosmic variance on their results.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.