The Clustering and Halo Masses of Star Forming Galaxies at z<1
Tim Dolley, Michael J. I. Brown, Benjamin J. Weiner, Mark Brodwin, C., S. Kochanek, Kevin A. Pimbblet, David P. Palamara, Buell T. Jannuzi, Arjun, Dey, David W. Atlee, Richard Beare

TL;DR
This study measures the clustering and halo masses of star forming galaxies at redshifts 0.2 to 1.0, revealing how star formation activity correlates with galaxy environment and halo mass, and connecting these galaxies to their local universe descendants.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of clustering and halo masses for star forming galaxies at intermediate redshifts, highlighting the dependence on infrared luminosity and star formation rate.
Findings
Higher L_TIR galaxies have stronger clustering.
Galaxies with highest SFRs reside in halos ~10^12.9 Msun/h.
Most z<1 star forming galaxies evolve into local blue or early-type galaxies.
Abstract
We present clustering measurements and halo masses of star forming galaxies at 0.2 < z < 1.0. After excluding AGN, we construct a sample of 22553 24 {\mu}m sources selected from 8.42 deg^2 of the Spitzer MIPS AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey of Bo\"otes. Mid-infrared imaging allows us to observe galaxies with the highest star formation rates (SFRs), less biased by dust obscuration afflicting the optical bands. We find that the galaxies with the highest SFRs have optical colors which are redder than typical blue cloud galaxies, with many residing within the green valley. At z > 0.4 our sample is dominated by luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs, L_TIR > 10^11 Lsun) and is comprised entirely of LIRGs and ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs, L_TIR > 10^12 Lsun) at z > 0.6. We observe weak clustering of r_0 = 3-6 Mpc/h for almost all of our star forming samples. We find that the clustering…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
