Comparison of the spatial and the angular clustering of X-ray AGN
L. Koutoulidis, M. Plionis, I. Georgantopoulos, A. Georgakakis, A., Akylas, S. Basilakos, G. Mountrichas

TL;DR
This study compares spatial and angular clustering measurements of X-ray AGN, finding consistent results when accounting for bias and non-linear growth, resolving previous discrepancies in clustering analyses.
Contribution
It introduces a novel clustering evolution model that aligns angular and spatial clustering results for X-ray AGN, using a well-defined Chandra sample.
Findings
Spatial and angular clustering lengths are consistent (~5.4-5.5 Mpc).
A new clustering evolution parametrization improves consistency.
Results support non-linear growth contributions in clustering analysis.
Abstract
The angular correlation function is a powerful tool for deriving the clustering properties of AGN and hence the mass of the corresponding dark matter halos in which they reside. However, studies based on the application of the angular correlation function on X-ray samples, yield results apparently inconsistent with those based on the direct estimation of the spatial correlation function. The goal of the present paper is to attempt to investigate this issue by analysing a well defined sample. To this end we use the hard-band (2-10 keV) X-ray selected sources of the Chandra AEGIS fields, chosen because of the availability of accurately derived flux sensitivity maps. In particular we use the 186 hard-band sources with spectroscopic redshifts in the range z=0.3-1.3, a range selected in order to contain the bulk of the AGN while minimizing the contribution of unknown clustering and…
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