Clustering, host halos and environment of z$\sim$2 galaxies as a function of their physical properties
Matthieu Bethermin, Martin Kilbinger, Emanuele Daddi, Jared Gabor,, Alexis Finoguenov, Henry McCracken, Melody Wolk, Herve Aussel, Veronica, Strazzulo, Emeric Le Floc'h, Raphael Gobat, Giulia Rodighiero, Mark, Dickinson, Lingyu Wang, Dieter Lutz, Sebastien Heinis

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between galaxy properties, their host halo masses, and environment at z~2, revealing how different galaxy types occupy halos and evolve into present-day structures.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the halo mass dependence on galaxy properties and the evolutionary pathways of z~2 galaxies into local universe structures.
Findings
Passive and star-forming galaxies have similar halo-stellar mass relations.
Halo mass for star-forming galaxies increases with SFR up to a point.
Passive galaxies show small-scale clustering excess due to satellite hosting halos.
Abstract
Using a sample of 25683 star-forming and 2821 passive galaxies at , selected in the COSMOS field following the BzK color criterion, we study the hosting halo mass and environment of galaxies as a function of their physical properties. Spitzer and Herschel provide accurate SFR estimates for starburst galaxies. We measure the auto- and cross-correlation functions of various galaxy sub-samples and infer the properties of their hosting halos using both an HOD model and the linear bias at large scale. We find that passive and star-forming galaxies obey a similarly rising relation between the halo and stellar mass. The mean host halo mass of star forming galaxies increases with the star formation rate between 30 and 200 M.yr, but flattens for higher values, except if we select only main-sequence galaxies. This reflects the expected transition from a regime of secular…
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