The VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey. The dependence of clustering on galaxy stellar mass at z~1
B. Meneux, L. Guzzo, B. Garilli, O. Le Fevre, A. Pollo, J. Blaizot, G., De Lucia, M. Bolzonella, F. Lamareille, L. Pozzetti, A. Cappi, A. Iovino, C., Marinoni, H.J. McCracken, S. de la Torre, D. Bottini, V. Le Brun, D., Maccagni, J.P. Picat, R. Scaramella, M. Scodeggio

TL;DR
This study measures how galaxy clustering at redshift ~0.85 depends on stellar mass, revealing that more massive galaxies are more strongly clustered and that this dependence evolves with redshift, supporting hierarchical galaxy formation models.
Contribution
First direct measurement of galaxy clustering dependence on stellar mass at z~0.85, with detailed bias evolution analysis compared to local universe data.
Findings
Clustering length increases with galaxy mass.
Evolution of clustering is faster for less massive galaxies.
Bias for massive galaxies decreases over time.
Abstract
Aims: We use the VVDS-Deep first-epoch data to measure the dependence of galaxy clustering on galaxy stellar mass, at z~0.85. Methods: We measure the projected correlation function wp(rp) for sub-samples with 0.5<z<1.2 covering different mass ranges between 10^9 and 10^11 Msun. We quantify in detail the observational selection biases using 40 mock catalogues built from the Millennium run and semi-analytic models. Results: Our simulations indicate that serious incompleteness in mass is present only for log(M/Msun)<9.5. In the mass range log(M/Msun)=[9.0-9.5], the photometric selection function of the VVDS misses 2/3rd of the galaxies. The sample is virtually 100% complete above 10^10 Msun. We present the first direct evidence for a clear dependence of clustering on the galaxy stellar mass at z~0.85. The clustering length increases from r0 ~ 2.76 h^-1 Mpc for galaxies with mass M>10^9…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
