The clustering of the first galaxy halos
Darren S. Reed (LANL), Richard Bower (ICC-Durham), Carlos S. Frenk, (ICC-Durham), Adrian Jenkins (ICC-Durham), Tom Theuns (ICC-Durham; Antwerp)

TL;DR
This study investigates the clustering of early universe dark matter halos at high redshifts, confirming large-scale clustering universality while revealing scale-dependent non-universality at small scales, with implications for cosmology and galaxy formation.
Contribution
It extends the understanding of halo clustering to higher redshifts and smaller scales, providing new fits for scale-dependent bias and highlighting simulation volume effects.
Findings
Large-scale halo bias matches theoretical predictions within 10-20%.
Small-scale clustering is stronger than extrapolated from lower redshifts.
Finite simulation volumes significantly affect halo and gas dynamics.
Abstract
We explore the clustering properties of high redshift dark matter halos, focusing on halos massive enough to host early generations of stars or galaxies at redshift 10 and greater. Halos are extracted from an array of dark matter simulations able to resolve down to the "mini-halo" mass scale at redshifts as high as 30, thus encompassing the expected full mass range of halos capable of hosting luminous objects and sources of reionization. Halo clustering on large-scales agrees with the Sheth, Mo & Tormen halo bias relation within all our simulations, greatly extending the regime where large-scale clustering is confirmed to be "universal" at the 10-20% level (which means, for example, that 3sigma halos of cluster mass at z=0 have the same large-scale bias with respect to the mass distribution as 3sigma halos of galaxy mass at z=10). However, on small-scales, the clustering of our massive…
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