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Jaiyul Yoo

Researcher at University of Zurich

Publications -  90
Citations -  5709

Jaiyul Yoo is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Redshift. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 82 publications receiving 5223 citations. Previous affiliations of Jaiyul Yoo include Harvard University & Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute.

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Cosmological constraints from the SDSS luminous red galaxies

Max Tegmark, +70 more
- 11 Dec 2006 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employed a matrix-based power spectrum estimation method using pseudo-Karhunen-Loeve eigenmodes, producing uncorrelated minimum-variance measurements in 20 k-bands of both the clustering power and its anisotropy due to redshift-space distortions.
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Ogle-2003-blg-262: finite-source effects from a point-mass lens

TL;DR: The OGLE-2003-BLG-262 microlensing event as mentioned in this paper, a relatively short (tE ¼ 12:5 � 0:1 day) microlens event generated by a point-mass lens transiting the face of a K giant source in the Galactic bulge, is the only published event to date in which the lens transits the source.
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OGLE-2003-BLG-262: Finite-Source Effects from a Point-Mass Lens

TL;DR: The OGLE-2003-BLG-262 microlensing event as mentioned in this paper was generated by a point-mass lens transiting the face of a K giant source in the Galactic bulge, and the resulting finite-source effects were used to measure the angular Einstein radius, theta_E=195+-17muas, and so constrain the lens mass to the fullwidth half-maximum interval 0.08 < M/M_sun < 0.54.
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New perspective on galaxy clustering as a cosmological probe: General relativistic effects

TL;DR: In this paper, a general relativistic description of galaxy clustering in a Friedmann-Lema\^{\i}tre-Robertson-Walker universe is presented, where the observed redshift and position of galaxies are affected by the matter fluctuations and the gravity waves between the source galaxies and the observer.
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General Relativistic Description of the Observed Galaxy Power Spectrum: Do We Understand What We Measure?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors extended the general relativistic description of galaxy clustering developed in Yoo, Fitzpatrick, and Zaldarriaga (2009) to the case of galaxy power spectrum.