Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Física
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. GAA - Grup d'Astronomia i Astrofísica
2025-05-15
We measure the growth of cosmic density fluctuations on large scales and across the redshift range 0.3 <¿ <0.8 through galaxy clustering and the cross-correlation of the ACT data release 6 cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing map and galaxies from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Legacy Survey, using three galaxy samples spanning the redshifts of 0.3 ¿¿ ¿0.45, 0.45 ¿¿ ¿0.6, 0.6 ¿¿ ¿0.8. We adopt a scale cut where nonlinear effects are negligible, so that the cosmological constraints are derived from the linear regime. We determine the amplitude of matter fluctuations over all three redshift bins using Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) data alone to be ¿8 =¿8¿(O¿/0.3)0.5 =0.772 ±0.040 in a joint analysis combining the three redshift bins and ACT lensing alone. Using a combination of ACT and Planck data we obtain ¿8 =0.765 ±0.032. The lowest redshift bin used is the least constraining and exhibits a ~2¿¿ tension with the other redshift bins; thus we also report constraints excluding the first redshift bin, giving ¿8 =0.785 ±0.033 for the combination of ACT and Planck. This result is in excellent agreement at the 0.3¿¿ level with measurements from galaxy lensing, but is 1.8¿¿ lower than predictions based on Planck primary CMB data. Understanding whether this hint of discrepancy in the growth of structure at low redshifts arises from a fluctuation, from systematics in data, or from new physics is a high priority for forthcoming CMB lensing and galaxy cross-correlation analyses.
Peer Reviewed
Postprint (published version)
Article
English
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Física; Cosmic microwave background; Cosmological parameters; Cosmology; Dark matter; Evolution of the Universe; Large scale structure of the Universe
American Physical Society (APS)
https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.111.103503
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Open Access
Attribution 4.0 International
E-prints [73034]