Local Large-Scale Structure and the Assumption of Homogeneity
Ryan C. Keenan, Amy J. Barger, Lennox L. Cowie

TL;DR
This study investigates the large-scale structure of the local universe, revealing a potential under-density that could bias cosmological measurements and influence interpretations of dark energy and cosmic expansion.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of the K-band luminosity density over a wide redshift range, indicating a local under-density that challenges the assumption of homogeneity.
Findings
Local luminosity density increases with distance beyond z=0.07
Local mass density may be lower than the global average
Potential bias in cosmological measurements due to local under-density
Abstract
Our recent estimates of galaxy counts and the luminosity density in the near-infrared (Keenan et al. 2010, 2012) indicated that the local universe may be under-dense on radial scales of several hundred megaparsecs (Mpc). Such a large-scale local under-density could introduce significant biases in the measurement and interpretation of cosmological observables, such as the inferred effects of dark energy on the rate of expansion. In Keenan et al. (2013), we measured the K-band luminosity density as a function of distance from us to test for such a local under-density. We made this measurement over the redshift range 0.01 < z < 0.2 (radial distances D ~ 50-800 Mpc). We found that the shape of the K-band luminosity function is relatively constant as a function of distance and environment. We derive a local (z < 0.07, D < 300 Mpc) K-band luminosity density that agrees well with previously…
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