Measurement of Galaxy Clustering at z~7.2 and the Evolution of Galaxy Bias from 3.8<z<8 in the XDF, GOODS-S AND GOODS-N
R. L. Barone-Nugent, M. Trenti, J. S. B. Wyithe, R. J. Bouwens, P. A., Oesch, G. D. Illingworth, C. M. Carollo, J. Su, M. Stiavelli, I. Labbe, P. G., van Dokkum

TL;DR
This study measures galaxy clustering at redshift 7.2 using Hubble data, revealing how galaxy bias evolves from redshift 3.8 to 8, and providing insights into galaxy-halo connections during reionization.
Contribution
It presents the first robust clustering measurement of galaxies at z~7.2, quantifies galaxy bias evolution, and explores the relation between galaxy luminosity and dark matter halo mass during reionization.
Findings
Detected a 4σ clustering signal at z=7.2
Galaxy bias increases from z=3.8 to 7.2
Higher luminosity galaxies show stronger clustering
Abstract
Lyman-Break Galaxy (LBG) samples observed during reionization () with Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3 are reaching sizes sufficient to characterize their clustering properties. Using a combined catalog from the Hubble eXtreme Deep Field and CANDELS surveys, containing LBG candidates at z>6.5 at a mean redshift of , we detect a clear clustering signal in the angular correlation function (ACF) at , corresponding to a real-space correlation length cMpc. The derived galaxy bias is that of dark-matter halos of M at , and highlights that galaxies below the current detection limit () are expected in lower-mass halos (M). We compute the ACF of LBGs at in the same surveys. A trend…
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