A new way to test the Cosmological Principle: measuring our peculiar velocity and the large scale anisotropy independently
Tobias Nadolny, Ruth Durrer, Martin Kunz, Hamsa Padmanabhan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to independently measure our peculiar velocity and large-scale anisotropy using galaxy survey data, enhancing tests of the Cosmological Principle.
Contribution
The novel approach allows simultaneous independent measurement of our velocity and intrinsic anisotropy, improving accuracy over previous methods.
Findings
Future surveys can measure our velocity with less than 5% error.
The method can detect intrinsic anisotropy with about 5% uncertainty.
Enhanced tests of the Cosmological Principle are possible with this approach.
Abstract
We present a novel approach to disentangle two key contributions to the largest-scale anisotropy of the galaxy distribution: (i) the intrinsic dipole due to clustering and anisotropic geometry, and (ii) the kinematic dipole due to our peculiar velocity. Including the redshift and angular size of galaxies, in addition to their fluxes and positions allows us to measure both the direction and amplitude of our velocity independently of the intrinsic dipole of the source distribution. We find that this new approach applied to future galaxy surveys (LSST and Euclid) and a SKA radio continuum survey will allow to measure our velocity () with a relative error in the amplitude and in direction, , well beyond what can be achieved when analysing only the number count dipole. We also find that galaxy…
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