Clustering of Lyman alpha emitters at z ~ 4.5
Katarina Kova\v{c}, Rachel S. Somerville, James E. Rhoads, Sangeeta, Malhotra, and JunXian Wang

TL;DR
This study measures the clustering of Lyman alpha emitters at z ~ 4.5, finding their correlation length and bias, and suggests they occupy similar mass halos as Lyman-break galaxies but with lower duty cycles.
Contribution
First detailed clustering analysis of Lyman alpha emitters at z ~ 4.5, linking observed clustering to dark matter halo properties and galaxy formation scenarios.
Findings
Measured correlation length r_0 ~ 3.2-4.6 Mpc/h depending on contamination
Estimated bias of about 3.7, similar to LBGs at similar redshift
Lyman alpha emitters are rarer than LBGs with comparable bias, implying lower duty cycle
Abstract
We present the clustering properties of 151 Lyman alpha emitting galaxies at z ~ 4.5 selected from the Large Area Lyman Alpha (LALA) survey. Our catalog covers an area of 36' x 36' observed with five narrowband filters. We assume that the angular correlation function w(theta) is well represented by a power law A_w = Theta^(-beta) with slope beta = 0.8, and we find A_w = 6.73 +/- 1.80. We then calculate the correlation length r_0 of the real-space two-point correlation function xi(r) = (r/r_0)^(-1.8) from A_w through the Limber transformation, assuming a flat, Lambda-dominated universe. Neglecting contamination, we find r_0 = 3.20 +/- 0.42 Mpc/h. Taking into account a possible 28% contamination by randomly distributed sources, we find r_0 = 4.61 +/- 0.6 Mpc/h. We compare these results with the expectations for the clustering of dark matter halos at this redshift in a Cold Dark Matter…
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