Galaxy Clustering in the Completed SDSS Redshift Survey: The Dependence on Color and Luminosity
Idit Zehavi, Zheng Zheng, David H. Weinberg, Michael R. Blanton, Neta, A. Bahcall, Andreas A. Berlind, Jon Brinkmann, Joshua A. Frieman, James E., Gunn, Robert H. Lupton, Robert C. Nichol, Will J. Percival, Donald P., Schneider, Ramin A. Skibba, Michael A. Strauss, Max Tegmark

TL;DR
This study analyzes how galaxy clustering depends on color and luminosity using SDSS data, revealing distinct patterns for red and blue galaxies and interpreting results within the Lambda-CDM+HOD framework.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of galaxy clustering dependence on color and luminosity, and interprets these findings through halo occupation distribution modeling within a Lambda-CDM cosmology.
Findings
Clustering amplitude increases with luminosity, especially sharply above L_*.
Redder galaxies exhibit stronger and steeper clustering than bluer ones.
Red galaxy clustering shows a sharp increase at high luminosities and strong small-scale clustering at low luminosities.
Abstract
We measure the luminosity and color dependence of galaxy clustering in the SDSS DR7 main galaxy sample, focusing on the projected correlation function w_p(r_p) of volume-limited samples. We interpret our measurements using halo occupation distribution (HOD) modeling assuming a Lambda-CDM cosmology. The amplitude of w_p(r_p) grows slowly with luminosity for L < L_* and increases sharply at higher luminosities, with bias factor b(>L)=1.06+0.23(L/L_*)^{1.12}. At fixed luminosity, redder galaxies have a stronger and steeper w_p(r_p), a trend that runs steadily from the bluest galaxies to the reddest galaxies. The individual luminosity trends for the red and blue galaxy populations are strikingly different. Blue galaxies show a slow but steady increase of w_p(r_p) with luminosity, at all scales. The large-scale clustering of red galaxies shows little luminosity dependence until a sharp…
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