On the Clustering of Sub-millimeter Galaxies
Christina C. Williams, Mauro Giavalisco, Cristiano Porciani, Min S., Yun, Alexandra Pope, Kimberly S. Scott, Jason E. Austermann, Itziar Aretxaga,, Bunyo Hatsukade, Kyoung-Soo Lee, Grant W. Wilson, J. Ryan Cybulski, David H., Hughes, Ryo Kawabe, Kotaro Kohno, Thushara Perera

TL;DR
This study measures the clustering of sub-millimeter galaxies using large-area imaging, finding that current data provide only upper limits on their clustering strength, which questions previous claims of strong clustering.
Contribution
The paper presents the largest contiguous sample of SMGs to date and demonstrates the limitations of current surveys in accurately measuring their clustering properties.
Findings
Upper limits on correlation length r_0 are 6-8 h^-1 Mpc at 3.7 mJy
Simulations show sampling limitations can obscure true clustering signals
Future surveys with larger areas and better resolution are needed for robust measurements
Abstract
We measure the angular two-point correlation function of sub-millimeter galaxies (SMGs) from 1.1-millimeter imaging of the COSMOS field with the AzTEC camera and ASTE 10-meter telescope. These data yields one of the largest contiguous samples of SMGs to date, covering an area of 0.72 degrees^2 down to a 1.26 mJy/beam (1-sigma) limit, including 189 (328) sources with S/N greater than 3.5 (3). We can only set upper limits to the correlation length r_0, modeling the correlation function as a power-law with pre-assigned slope. Assuming existing redshift distributions, we derive 68.3% confidence level upper limits of r_0 < 6-8 h^-1 Mpc at 3.7 mJy, and r_0 < 11-12 h^-1 Mpc at 4.2 mJy. Although consistent with most previous estimates, these upper limits imply that the real r_0 is likely smaller. This casts doubts on the robustness of claims that SMGs are characterized by significantly stronger…
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