The clustering of galaxies with pseudo bulge and classical bulge in the local Universe
Lan Wang, Lixin Wang, Cheng Li, Jian Hu, Houjun Mo, Huiyuan Wang

TL;DR
This study examines how different galaxy bulge types relate to their local environment and interactions, revealing that pseudo-bulges and disk galaxies have more close neighbors on small scales, unlike classical bulges.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of clustering and neighbor counts for galaxies with different bulge types, highlighting the environmental dependence of bulge formation.
Findings
Pseudo-bulge and disk galaxies show excess close neighbors at small scales.
Classical bulges only show excess at low stellar masses.
Large-scale clustering is similar across bulge types.
Abstract
We investigate the clustering properties and close neighbour counts for galaxies with different types of bulges and stellar masses. We select samples of "classical" and "pseudo" bulges, as well as "bulge-less" disk galaxies, based on the bulge/disk decomposition catalog of SDSS galaxies provided by Simard et al. (2011). For a given galaxy sample we estimate: the projected two-point cross-correlation function with respect to a spectroscopic reference sample, w_p(r_p), and the average background-subtracted neighbour count within a projected separation using a photometric reference sample, N_neighbour(<r_p). We compare the results with the measurements of control samples matched in color, concentration and redshift. We find that, when limited to a certain stellar mass range and matched in color and concentration, all the samples present similar clustering amplitudes and neighbour counts on…
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