How to distinguish a nearly flat Universe from a flat Universe using the
orientation independence of a comoving standard ruler
release_y2cmkkvusnb4fhuikw527hygvm
by
Boudewijn F. Roukema
2001
Abstract
Several recent observations using standard rulers and standard candles now
suggest, either individually or in combination, that the Universe is close to
flat, i.e. that the curvature radius is about as large as the horizon radius
(∼ 10h^-1Gpc) or larger. Here, a method of distinguishing an almost flat
universe from a precisely flat universe using a single observational data set,
without using any microwave background information, is presented. The method
(i) assumes that a standard ruler should have no preferred orientation (radial
versus tangential) to the observer, and (ii) requires that the (comoving)
length of the standard ruler be known independently (e.g. from low redshift
estimates). The claimed feature at fixed comoving length in the power
spectrum of density perturbations, detected among quasars, Lyman break galaxies
or other high redshift objects, would provide an adequate standard candle to
prove that the Universe is curved, if indeed it is curved. For example, a
combined intrinsic and measurement uncertainty of 1
standard ruler applied at a redshift of z=3 would distinguish an
hyperbolic (Ω_m=0.2,Ω_Λ=0.7) or a spherical
(Ω_m=0.4,Ω_Λ=0.7) universe from a flat one to 1-P > 95
confidence.
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