A large narrow band H$\alpha$ survey at $z\sim0.2$: the bright end of the luminosity function, cosmic variance and clustering across cosmic time
Andra Stroe, David Sobral

TL;DR
This large H-alpha survey at z~0.2 provides robust measurements of the luminosity function, star formation rate density, and galaxy clustering, revealing the impact of cosmic variance and the environment of star-forming galaxies.
Contribution
It presents the largest volume H-alpha survey at z~0.2, accurately characterizing the luminosity function and clustering, and analyzing the effects of cosmic variance on small surveys.
Findings
Luminosity function well described by Schechter function
Cosmic variance significantly affects small-volume surveys
Most luminous H-alpha emitters are more strongly clustered
Abstract
We carried out the largest ( Mpc, 26 deg) H narrow band survey to date at in the SA22, W2 and XMMLSS extragalactic fields. Our survey covers a large enough volume to overcome cosmic variance and to sample bright and rare H emitters up to an observed luminosity of erg s, equivalent to yr. Using our sample of sources brighter than erg s ( yr), we derive H luminosity functions, which are well described by a Schechter function with Mpc and erg s (with a fixed faint end slope ). We find that surveys probing smaller volumes ( Mpc) are heavily affected by cosmic variance, which can lead to errors of over per cent in the…
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.
