Clustering properties of BzK-selected galaxies in GOODS-N: environmental quenching and triggering of star formation at z ~ 2
Lihwai Lin, Mark Dickinson, Hung-Yu Jian, A. I. Merson, C. M. Baugh,, Douglas Scott, Sebastien Foucaud, Wei-Hao Wang, Chi-Hung Yan, Hao-Jing Yan,, Yi-Wen Cheng, Yicheng Guo, John Helly, Franz Kirsten, David C. Koo, Claudia, del P. Lagos, Nicole Meger, Alexandra Pope, Luc Simard

TL;DR
This study investigates the clustering behavior of BzK-selected galaxies at z~2, revealing how environment influences star formation activity and quenching, with implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of galaxy clustering as a function of stellar mass, SFR, and SSFR at z~2, highlighting environmental effects on star formation and quenching.
Findings
Passive galaxies are more strongly clustered than star-forming ones.
Clustering strength varies with stellar mass, SFR, and SSFR.
Environmental effects influence star formation quenching and triggering at z~2.
Abstract
Using a sample of BzK-selected galaxies at z~2 identified from the CFHT/WIRCAM near-infrared survey of GOODS-North, we discuss the relation between star formation rate (SFR), specific star formation rate (SSFR), and stellar mass (M_{*}), and the clustering of galaxies as a function of these parameters. For star-forming galaxies (sBzKs), the UV-based SFR, corrected for extinction, scales with the stellar mass as SFR ~ M_{*}^{alpha} with alpha = 0.74+/-0.20 down to M_{*} ~ 10^{9} M_{solar}, indicating a weak dependence on the stellar mass of the SSFR. We also measure the angular correlation function and hence infer the correlation length for sBzK galaxies as a function of M_{*}, SFR, and SSFR, as well as K-band apparent magnitude. We show that passive galaxies (pBzKs) are more strongly clustered than sBzK galaxies at a given stellar mass, mirroring the color-density relation seen at lower…
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