The Imprint of Cosmic Reionization on Galaxy Clustering
Stuart Wyithe, Avi Loeb

TL;DR
This paper models how cosmic reionization influences galaxy clustering, revealing significant bias effects at intermediate redshifts that impact the interpretation of galaxy survey data.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking reionization to galaxy bias, quantifying its impact on clustering measurements across different redshifts and galaxy types.
Findings
Reionization causes a 10-20% bias correction in galaxy clustering at z~3.
Reionization bias is scale-independent and more significant for lower-mass systems.
Bias correction is negligible for luminous red galaxies at z<1.
Abstract
We consider the effect of reionization on the clustering properties of galaxy samples at intermediate redshifts (z~0.3-5.5). Current models for the reionization of intergalactic hydrogen predict that overdense regions will be reionized early, thus delaying the build up of stellar mass in the progenitors of massive lower-redshift galaxies. As a result, the stellar populations observed in intermediate redshift galaxies are somewhat younger and hence brighter in overdense regions of the Universe. Galaxy surveys would therefore be sensitive to galaxies with a somewhat lower dark matter mass in overdense regions. The corresponding increase in the observed number density of galaxies can be parameterized as a galaxy bias due to reionization. We model this process using merger trees combined with a stellar synthesis code. Our model demonstrates that reionization has a significant effect on the…
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