Evidence for a ~300 Mpc Scale Under-density in the Local Galaxy Distribution
Ryan C. Keenan, Amy J. Barger, Lennox L.Cowie

TL;DR
This study investigates a potential large-scale under-density in the local universe by analyzing K-band luminosity density across different redshifts, suggesting it could bias cosmological measurements like the Hubble constant.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for a ~300 Mpc scale under-density in the local galaxy distribution using combined survey data, impacting cosmological parameter estimates.
Findings
Local luminosity density matches previous studies at z<0.07
Luminosity density increases by ~1.5 times beyond z~0.07
Implication that local mass density is lower than the global average
Abstract
Galaxy counts and recent measurements of the luminosity density in the near-infrared (NIR) have indicated the possibility that the local universe may be under-dense on scales of several hundred megaparsecs. The presence of a large-scale under-density in the local universe could introduce significant biases into the interpretation of cosmological observables, and, in particular, into the inferred effects of dark energy on the expansion rate. Here we measure the K-band luminosity density as a function of redshift to test for such a local under-density. In this effort, we combine photometry from UKIDSS and 2MASS with redshifts from the SDSS, 2DFGRS, 6DFGRS, 2MR, and GAMA surveys. We find that the overall shape of the z=0 rest-frame K-band luminosity function (M* = -22.15 +/- 0.04 and alpha = -1.02 +/- 0.03) appears to be relatively constant as a function of environment and redshift out to…
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