The UV-Optical Color Dependence of Galaxy Clustering in the Local Universe
Yeong-Shang Loh, R. Michael Rich, S\'ebastien Heinis, Ryan Scranton,, Ryan P. Mallery, Samir Salim, D. Christopher Martin, Ted Wyder, St\'ephane, Arnouts, Tom A. Barlow, Karl Forster, Peter G. Friedman, Patrick Morrissey,, Susan G. Neff, David Schiminovich, Mark Seibert

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy clustering varies with UV-optical color in the local universe, revealing differences in environment and structure among red, green, and blue galaxy populations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of galaxy clustering dependence on UV-optical color, highlighting environmental distinctions and the role of galaxy evolution pathways.
Findings
Red and green galaxies show strong small-scale redshift space distortions.
Blue galaxies exhibit less distortion and more large-scale clustering.
Red, green, and blue galaxies have relative biases of 1.5, 1.1, and 0.9 respectively.
Abstract
We measure the UV-optical color dependence of galaxy clustering in the local universe. Using the clean separation of the red and blue sequences made possible by the NUV - r color-magnitude diagram, we segregate the galaxies into red, blue and intermediate "green" classes. We explore the clustering as a function of this segregation by removing the dependence on luminosity and by excluding edge-on galaxies as a means of a non-model dependent veto of highly extincted galaxies. We find that \xi (r_p, \pi) for both red and green galaxies shows strong redshift space distortion on small scales -- the "finger-of-God" effect, with green galaxies having a lower amplitude than is seen for the red sequence, and the blue sequence showing almost no distortion. On large scales, \xi (r_p, \pi) for all three samples show the effect of large-scale streaming from coherent infall. On scales 1 Mpc/h < r_p <…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
