Relative clustering and the joint halo occupation distribution of red-sequence and blue-cloud galaxies in COMBO-17
P. Simon, M. Hetterscheidt, C. Wolf, K. Meisenheimer, H. Hildebrandt,, P. Schneider, M. Schirmer, T. Erben

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial distribution and clustering of red and blue galaxies in the COMBO-17 survey, revealing their different clustering behaviors and their relation to dark matter through a halo model with a new parameter R.
Contribution
It introduces a new parameter R to describe the relation between red and blue galaxies within halos and interprets galaxy clustering using a halo model with galaxy-galaxy lensing data.
Findings
Red and blue galaxies are differently clustered.
No significant evolution of relative clustering with redshift.
A new parameter R describes the relation between galaxy types within halos.
Abstract
This paper studies the relative spatial distribution of red-sequence and blue-cloud galaxies, and their relation to the dark matter distribution in the COMBO-17 survey as function of scale down to z~1. We measure the 2nd-order auto- and cross-correlation functions of galaxy clustering and express the relative biasing by using aperture statistics. Also estimated is the relation between the galaxies and the dark matter distribution exploiting galaxy-galaxy lensing (GGL). All observables are further interpreted in terms of a halo model. To fully explain the galaxy clustering cross-correlation function with a halo model, we need to introduce a new parameter,R, that describes the statistical relation between numbers of red and blue galaxies within the same halo. We find that red and blue galaxies are clearly differently clustered, a significant evolution of the relative clustering with…
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