TL;DR
This paper investigates how fiber collisions in spectroscopic surveys distort galaxy power spectrum measurements and introduces two methods to correct for these effects, enabling more accurate analysis at smaller scales.
Contribution
It presents two novel correction techniques for fiber collision effects on the galaxy power spectrum, improving accuracy over existing methods.
Findings
The first method recovers the true monopole with residuals less than 0.5% at high k.
The second method models fiber collision effects as a convolution, accurately predicting multipoles.
Both methods enable analysis of smaller scales than previously possible.
Abstract
Fiber-fed multi-object spectroscopic surveys, with their ability to collect an unprecedented number of redshifts, currently dominate large-scale structure studies. However, physical constraints limit these surveys from successfully collecting redshifts from galaxies too close to each other on the focal plane. This ultimately leads to significant systematic effects on galaxy clustering measurements. Using simulated mock catalogs, we demonstrate that fiber collisions have a significant impact on the power spectrum, , monopole and quadrupole that exceeds sample variance at scales smaller than . We present two methods to account for fiber collisions in the power spectrum. The first, statistically reconstructs the clustering of fiber collided galaxy pairs by modeling the distribution of the line-of-sight displacements between them. It also properly accounts for fiber…
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