The clustering and evolution of H-alpha emitters at z~1 from HiZELS
David Sobral (1), Philip N. Best (1), James E. Geach (2), Ian Smail, (2), Michele Cirasuolo (3), Timothy Garn (1), Gavin B. Dalton (4), Jaron, Kurk (5) ((1) IfA Edinburgh, (2) Durham, (3) ATC Edinburgh, (4) Oxford, (5), MPE)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the clustering of H-alpha emitting galaxies at z~1, revealing how their spatial distribution correlates with luminosity, morphology, and dark matter halo mass, and compares these properties across cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed clustering analysis of H-alpha emitters at z~1, linking galaxy properties to dark matter haloes and evolutionary trends over cosmic time.
Findings
Clustering strength increases with H-alpha luminosity.
Galaxies with higher SFRs reside in more massive haloes.
Star formation efficiency is higher at earlier cosmic epochs.
Abstract
(Abridged) The clustering properties of a well-defined sample of 734 H-alpha emitters at z=0.84 obtained as part of the Hi-z Emission Line Survey (HiZELS) are investigated. The spatial correlation function is very well-described by (r/r_0)^-1.8, with r_0=2.7+-0.3Mpc/h. The correlation length r_0 increases strongly with H-alpha luminosity, L_H-alpha, from r_0~2Mpc/h for the most quiescent galaxies (star-formation rates of ~4M_sun/yr), up to r_0>5Mpc/h for the brightest galaxies in H-alpha. The correlation length also increases with increasing rest-frame K-band luminosity (M_K), but the r_0-L_H-alpha correlation maintains its full statistical significance at fixed M_K. At z=0.84, star-forming galaxies classified as irregulars or mergers are much more clustered than discs and non-mergers, but once the samples are matched in L_H-alpha and M_K, the differences vanish, implying that the…
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