Void Statistics in Large Galaxy Redshift Surveys: Does Halo Occupation of Field Galaxies Depend on Environment?
Jeremy L. Tinker, Charlie Conroy, Peder Norberg, Santiago G. Patiri,, David H. Weinberg, Michael S. Warren

TL;DR
This study tests whether galaxy properties depend on environment by analyzing void statistics and galaxy correlation functions, finding that galaxy luminosity and color are mainly determined by halo mass, not environment.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of void statistics from SDSS and 2dF surveys, and demonstrates that standard halo occupation models accurately predict galaxy distribution without needing environment-dependent modifications.
Findings
Void statistics match predictions of standard HOD models.
Galaxy color and luminosity are primarily determined by halo mass.
No evidence for environment-dependent galaxy formation efficiency.
Abstract
We use measurements of the projected galaxy correlation function w_p and galaxy void statistics to test whether the galaxy content of halos of fixed mass is systematically different in low density environments. We present new measurements of the void probability function (VPF) and underdensity probability function (UPF) from Data Release Four of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, as well as new measurements of the VPF from the full data release of the Two-Degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey. We compare these measurements to predictions calculated from models of the Halo Occupation Distribution (HOD) that are constrained to match both w_p and the space density of galaxies. The standard implementation of the HOD assumes that galaxy occupation depends on halo mass only, and is independent of local environment. For luminosity-defined samples, we find that the standard HOD prediction is a good…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
