Galaxy clustering in the NEWFIRM Medium Band Survey: the relationship between stellar mass and dark matter halo mass at 1 < z < 2
David A. Wake, Katherine E. Whitaker, Ivo Labb\'e, Pieter G. van, Dokkum, Marijn Franx, Ryan Quadri, Gabriel Brammer, Mariska Kriek, Britt F., Lundgren, Danilo Marchesini, Adam Muzzin

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy clustering relates to stellar mass at redshifts 1 to 2, revealing that more massive galaxies are more strongly clustered and that the stellar-to-halo mass relation evolves with redshift, indicating halo downsizing.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of galaxy clustering and stellar-halo mass relations at 1 < z < 2, extending understanding of galaxy evolution and halo occupation at these epochs.
Findings
More massive galaxies show higher clustering amplitude.
The stellar mass-to-halo mass relation shows little redshift evolution within the studied range.
The peak star formation efficiency shifts to higher halo masses at higher redshift.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the clustering of galaxies as a function of their stellar mass at 1 < z < 2 using data from the NEWFIRM Medium Band Survey (NMBS). The precise photometric redshifts and stellar masses that the NMBS produces allows us to define a series of mass limited samples of galaxies more massive than 0.7, 1 and 3x10^10 Msun in redshift intervals centered on z = 1.1, 1.5 and 1.9 respectively. In each redshift interval we show that there exists a strong dependence of clustering strength on the stellar mass limit of the sample, with more massive galaxies showing a higher clustering amplitude on all scales. We further interpret our clustering measurements in the LCDM cosmological context using the halo model of galaxy clustering. We show that the typical halo mass of central and satellite galaxies increases with stellar mass, whereas the satellite fraction decreases with…
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