Clustering and descendants of MUSYC galaxies at z<1.5
Nelson Padilla (1), Daniel Christlein (2), Eric Gawiser (3), Roberto, Gonz\'alez (1), Lucia Guaita (1), Leopoldo Infante (1) ((1) Departamento de, Astronom\'ia y Astrof\'isica, Pontificia Universidad Cat\'olica de Chile,, Santiago, Chile, (2) Max Planck Institut fur Astrophysik

TL;DR
This study measures galaxy clustering evolution up to z~1.5 using MUSYC data, demonstrating accurate clustering estimates despite redshift errors and revealing luminosity and type-dependent clustering trends over cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a robust method for measuring galaxy clustering with photometric redshifts and assesses the evolution of clustering for different galaxy types and luminosities up to z~1.5.
Findings
Clustering length r_0 can be accurately recovered up to z~1.5.
Brighter galaxies exhibit higher clustering at low redshift.
Early type galaxies show increasing clustering strength with redshift.
Abstract
We measure the evolution of galaxy clustering out to a redshift of z~1.5 using data from two MUSYC fields, the Extended Hubble Deep Field South (EHDF-S) and the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDF-S). We use photometric redshift information to calculate the projected-angular correlation function, omega(sigma), from which we infer the projected correlation function Xi(sigma). We demonstrate that this technique delivers accurate measurements of clustering even when large redshift measurement errors affect the data. To this aim we use two mock MUSYC fields extracted from a LambdaCDM simulation populated with GALFORM semi-analytic galaxies which allow us to assess the degree of accuracy of our estimates of Xi(sigma) and to identify and correct for systematic effects in our measurements. We study the evolution of clustering for volume limited subsamples of galaxies selected using their…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
