EMU and Euclid: Detection of a radio-optical galaxy clustering cross-correlation signal between the Evolutionary Map of the Universe and Euclid
G. Piccirilli (1, 2), B. Bahr-Kalus (3, 1, 2), S. Camera (1, 2, 3), J. Asorey (4), C. L. Hale (5, 6), G. Fabbian (7), A. D. Asher (8, 9), M. Vai (1, 2), C. S. Saraf (10), D. Parkinson (10, 11), N. Tessore (12, 13), K. Tanidis (5, 14), M. Kunz (15), A. M. Hopkins (16)

TL;DR
This study detects a significant radio-optical galaxy clustering cross-correlation between EMU and Euclid surveys, validating the methodology and supporting future cosmological analyses using combined radio and optical data.
Contribution
First measurement of the EMU-Euclid cross-spectrum demonstrating robustness and agreement with theoretical models, paving the way for future cosmological studies.
Findings
Detected cross-correlation above 8σ significance
Cross-spectra are consistent across different source finders
Measured signal aligns with theoretical predictions
Abstract
Synergies between large-scale radio-continuum and optical/near-infrared galaxy surveys are a powerful tool for cosmology. Cross-correlating these surveys can constrain the redshift distribution of radio sources, mitigate systematic effects, and place constraints on cosmological models. We perform the first measurement of the clustering cross-spectrum between radio-continuum sources in the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) survey and galaxies from the ESA Euclid satellite mission's Q1 release. Our goal is to detect and characterise the cross-correlation signal, test its robustness against systematic effects, and compare our measurements with theoretical predictions. We use data from the Australian SKA Pathfinder's EMU Main Survey, which overlaps with the Euclid Deep Field South. We generate two radio-source catalogues using different source finders to create galaxy maps. We measure…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
