Investigating Ultra-Large Large-Scale Structures: Potential Implications for Cosmology

Lopez, Alexia, Clowes, Roger G orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-8370-465X and Williger, Gerard M. (2024) Investigating Ultra-Large Large-Scale Structures: Potential Implications for Cosmology. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences . ISSN 1364-503X

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Official URL: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rsta

Abstract

Large-scale structure (LSS) studies in cosmology map and analyse matter in the Universe on the largest scales. Understanding the LSS can provide observational support for the Cosmological Principle (CP) and the Standard Cosmological Model (ΛCDM). In recent years, many discoveries have been made of LSSs that are so large that they become difficult to understand within ΛCDM. Reasons for this are: they potentially challenge the CP, (i.e. the scale of homogeneity); and their formation and origin are not fully understood. In this article we review two recent LSS discoveries: the Giant Arc (GA, ∼1 Gpc) and the Big Ring (BR, ∼400 Mpc). Both structures are in the same cosmological neighbourhood -- at the same redshift z∼0.8 and with a separation on the sky of only ∼12∘. Both structures exceed the often-cited scale of homogeneity (Yadav+ 2010), so individually and together, these two intriguing structures raise more questions for the validity of the CP and potentially hint at new physics beyond the Standard Model. The GA and BR were discovered using a novel method of mapping faint matter at intermediate redshifts, interpreted from the MgII absorption doublets seen in the spectra of background quasars.


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