Evolution of the Clustering of Photometrically Selected SDSS Galaxies
Ashley J. Ross, Will J. Percival, Robert J. Brunner

TL;DR
This study investigates how the clustering and bias of SDSS galaxies with specific photometric redshifts evolve over time, revealing that galaxy formation occurs in halos of roughly constant mass, influencing bias reduction.
Contribution
It provides a detailed halo-model analysis of galaxy clustering evolution, linking bias changes to halo mass and galaxy formation in a specific mass range.
Findings
Bias increases with redshift more than passive evolution predicts.
Galaxies form in halos of about 10^12 solar masses across the redshift range.
Bias decreases over time due to halo mass and galaxy formation in low-mass halos.
Abstract
We measure the angular auto-correlation functions (w) of SDSS galaxies selected to have photometric redshifts 0.1 < z < 0.4 and absolute r-band magnitudes Mr < -21.2. We split these galaxies into five overlapping redshift shells of width 0.1 and measure w in each subsample in order to investigate the evolution of SDSS galaxies. We find that the bias increases substantially with redshift - much more so than one would expect for a passively evolving sample. We use halo-model analysis to determine the best-fit halo-occupation-distribution (HOD) for each subsample, and the best-fit models allow us to interpret the change in bias physically. In order to properly interpret our best-fit HODs, we convert each halo mass to its z = 0 passively evolved bias (bo), enabling a direct comparison of the best-fit HODs at different redshifts. We find that the minimum halo bo required to host a galaxy…
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