Constraining the relative velocity effect using the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey

Abstract

We analyse the power spectrum of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), Data Release 12 (DR12) to constrain the relative velocity effect, which represents a potential systematic for measurements of the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) scale. The relative velocity effect is sourced by the different evolution of baryon and cold dark matter perturbations before decoupling. Our power spectrum model includes all 1-loop redshift-space terms corresponding to v bc parameterised by the bias parameter bv2. We also include the linear terms proportional to the relative density, δ bc, and relative velocity dispersion, θ bc, which we parameterise with the bias parameters b bcδ and b bcθ. Our data does not support a detection of the relative velocity effect in any of these parameters. Combining the low and high redshift bins of BOSS, we find limits of bv2 = 0.012 0.015\;( 0.031), b bcδ = -1.0 2.5\;( 6.2) and b bcθ = -114 55\;( 175) with 68\% (95\%) confidence levels. These constraints restrict the potential systematic shift in DA(z), H(z) and fσ8, due to the relative velocity, to 1\%, 0.8\% and 2\%, respectively. Given the current uncertainties on the BAO measurements of BOSS these shifts correspond to 0.53σ, 0.5σ and 0.22σ for DA(z), H(z) and fσ8, respectively.

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