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We probe the angular scale of homogeneity in the local Universe using blue galaxies from the SDSS survey as a cosmological tracer. Through the scaled counts in spherical caps, $ mathcal{N}(<theta) $, and the fractal correlation dimension, $mathcal{D}_{2}(theta)$, we find an angular scale of transition to homogeneity for this sample of $theta_{text{H}} = 22.19^{circ} pm 1.02^{circ}$. A comparison of this measurement with another obtained using a different cosmic tracer at a similar redshift range ($z < 0.06$), namely, the HI extragalactic sources from the ALFALFA catalogue, confirms that both results are in excellent agreement (taking into account the corresponding bias correction). We also perform tests to asses the robustness of our results. For instance, we test if the size of the surveyed area is large enough to identify the transition scale we search for, and also we investigate a reduced sample of blue galaxies, obtaining in both cases a similar angular scale for the transition to homogeneity. Our results, besides confirming the existence of an angular scale of transition to homogeneity in different cosmic tracers present in the local Universe, show that the observed angular scale $theta_{text{H}}$ agrees well with what is expected in the $Lambda$CDM scenario. Although we can not prove spatial homogeneity within the approach followed, our results provide one more evidence of it, strengthening the validity of the Cosmological Principle.
We measure the transverse baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) signal in the local Universe using a sample of blue galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) survey as a cosmological tracer. The method is weakly dependent on a cosmological model
We use the scaled counts in spherical caps $mathcal{N}(<theta)$ and the fractal correlation dimension $ mathcal{D}_{2}(theta) $ procedures to search for a transition scale to homogeneity in the local universe as given by the ALFALFA catalogue (a samp
The assumption that the Universe, on sufficiently large scales, is homogeneous and isotropic is crucial to our current understanding of cosmology. In this paper we test if the observed galaxy distribution is actually homogeneous on large scales. We h
Disk scale length and central surface brightness for a sample of about 29955 bright disk galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey have been analysed. Cross correlation of the SDSS sample with the LEDA catalogue allowed us to investigate the variati
We report measurements of the scale of cosmic homogeneity ($r_{h}$) using the recently released quasar sample of the sixteenth data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV DR16). We perform our analysis in 2 redshift bins lying in the redshi