The clustering of the SDSS-IV extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey DR14 quasar sample: Measuring the anisotropic Baryon Acoustic Oscillations with redshift weights
Fangzhou Zhu, Nikhil Padmanabhan, Ashley J. Ross, Martin White, Will, J. Percival, Rossana Ruggeri, Gong-bo Zhao, Dandan Wang, Eva-Maria Mueller,, Etienne Burtin, H\'ector Gil-Mar\'in, Florian Beutler, Jonathan Brinkmann,, Joel R. Brownstein, Kyle Dawson, Axel de la Macorra

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the anisotropic BAO signal from the SDSS-IV eBOSS DR14 quasar sample using redshift weights, providing precise measurements of cosmic distances and expansion rates across a broad redshift range.
Contribution
It introduces the application of redshift weights to quasar clustering data, improving measurement precision and enabling detailed distance-redshift relation reconstruction.
Findings
Achieved 4.6% measurement of $D_M$ at z=2.2
Measured $H$ at z=0.8 with high precision
Redshift weighting reduces measurement errors by over 25%
Abstract
We present an anisotropic analysis of Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) signal from the SDSS-IV extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS) Data Release 14 (DR14) quasar sample. The sample consists of 147,000 quasars distributed over a redshift range of . We apply the redshift weights technique to the clustering of quasars in this sample and achieve a 4.6 per cent measurement of the angular distance measurement at and Hubble parameter at . We parameterize the distance-redshift relation, relative to a fiducial model, as a quadratic expansion. The coefficients of this expansion are used to reconstruct the distance-redshift relation and obtain distance and Hubble parameter measurements at all redshifts within the redshift range of the sample. Reporting the result at two characteristic redshifts, we determine $D_M(z=1) = 3405\pm305 \…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
