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The size of the horizon at the matter-radiation equality is a key scale of the Big Bang cosmology that is directly related to the energy-matter content of the Universe. In this letter, we argue that this scale can be accurately measured from the observed clustering of galaxies in new large scale surveys. We demonstrate that the zero-crossing, r_c, of the 2-point galaxy correlation function is closely related to the horizon size at matter-radiation equality for a large variety of flat LCDM models. Using large-volume cosmological simulations, we also show that the pristine zero-crossing is unaltered by non-linear evolution of density fluctuations, redshift distortions and galaxy biases. This makes r_c a very powerful standard ruler that can be accurately measured, at a percent level, in upcoming experiments that will collect redshifts of millions of galaxies and quasars.
The growth history of large-scale structure in the Universe is a powerful probe of the cosmological model, including the nature of dark energy. We study the growth rate of cosmic structure to redshift $z = 0.9$ using more than $162{,}000$ galaxy reds
How much does the curvature perturbation change after it leaves the horizon, and when should one evaluate the power spectrum? To answer these questions we study single field inflation models numerically, and compare the evolution of different curvatu
Supernova Ia magnitude surveys measure the dimensionless luminosity distance $H_{0}D_{L}$. However, from the distances alone one cannot obtain quantities like $H(z)$ or the dark energy equation of state, unless further cosmological assumptions are im
Supernovae arise from progenitor stars occupying the upper end of the initial mass function. Their extreme brightness allows individual massive stars to be detected at cosmic distances, lending supernovae great potential as tracers of the upper end o
Galaxy redshift surveys are one of the pillars of the current standard cosmological model and remain a key tool in the experimental effort to understand the origin of cosmic acceleration. To this end, the next generation of surveys aim at achieving s