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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 have carried out a multifractal analysis of the galaxy distribution in a volume limited subsample from the SDSS DR6. This considers the scaling properties of different moments of galaxy number counts in spheres of varying radius $r$ centered on galaxies. This analysis gives the spectrum of generalized dimension $D_q(r)$, where $q >0$ quantifies the scaling properties in overdense regions and $q<0$ in underdense regions. We expect $D_q(r)=3$ for a homogeneous, random point distribution. In our analysis we have determined $D_q(r)$ in the range $-4 le q le 4$ and $7 le r le 98 h^{-1} {rm Mpc}$. In addition to the SDSS data we have analysed several random samples which are homogeneous by construction. Simulated galaxy samples generated from dark matter N-body simulations and the Millennium Run were also analysed. The SDSS data is considered to be homogeneous if the measured $D_q$ is consistent with that of the random samples. We find that the galaxy distribution becomes homogeneous at a length-scale between 60 and $70 h^{-1} {rm Mpc}$. The galaxy distribution, we find, is homogeneous at length-scales greater than $70 h^{-1} {rm Mpc}$. This is consistent with earlier works which find the transition to homogeneity at around $70 h^{-1} {rm Mpc}$.
We analyze a set of volume limited sample of galaxies from the SDSS to study the issue of cosmic homogeneity. We use the Renyi entropy of different order to probe the inhomogeneties present in the galaxy distributions. We also calculate the Renyi div
The quasar sample of the fourteenth data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV DR14) is used to determine the cosmic homogeneity scale in the redshift range $0.80<z<2.24$. We divide the sample into 4 redshift bins, each one with $N_{rm q}
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, $mathcal{D}
We report measurements of the scale of cosmic homogeneity ($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
Detecting the large-scale structure of the Universe based on the galaxy distribution and characterising its components is of fundamental importance in astrophysics but is also a difficult task to achieve. Wide-area spectroscopic redshift surveys are