Precision cosmography with stacked voids
Guilhem Lavaux, Benjamin D. Wandelt

TL;DR
This paper introduces a geometrical Alcock-Paczynski method using stacked cosmic voids to measure the Universe's expansion, showing promising results for dark energy constraints, especially with the EUCLID survey.
Contribution
It develops a novel void-based AP test algorithm, models void shape distortions, and assesses its potential for constraining dark energy parameters with upcoming surveys.
Findings
Void-based AP test can double dark energy figure of merit for EUCLID.
Stacked voids outperform BAO by an order of magnitude in constraining dark energy.
Method robustly estimates void shape distortions and accounts for peculiar velocities.
Abstract
We present a purely geometrical method for probing the expansion history of the Universe from the observation of the shape of stacked voids in spectroscopic redshift surveys. Our method is an Alcock-Paczynski (AP) test based on the average sphericity of voids posited on the local isotropy of the Universe. It works by comparing the temporal extent of cosmic voids along the line of sight with their angular, spatial extent. We describe the algorithm that we use to detect and stack voids in redshift shells on the light cone and test it on mock light cones produced from N-body simulations. We establish a robust statistical model for estimating the average stretching of voids in redshift space and quantify the contamination by peculiar velocities. Finally, assuming that the void statistics that we derive from N-body simulations is preserved when considering galaxy surveys, we assess the…
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