Host Dark Matter Halos of SDSS Red and Blue Quasars: No Significant Difference in Large-scale Environment
Grayson C. Petter (Dartmouth), Ryan C. Hickox, David M. Alexander,, James E. Geach, Adam D. Myers, David J. Rosario, Victoria A. Fawcett, Lizelke, Klindt, Kelly E. Whalen

TL;DR
This study finds that optically-selected quasars' large-scale dark matter halo environments do not significantly differ with their optical colors, challenging models linking quasar color to environment and suggesting nuclear-scale origins for color differences.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis showing no correlation between quasar optical color and halo environment, using two independent methods and a vast quasar sample.
Findings
No halo bias trend with optical color across analyses.
Quasars occupy halos of similar mass regardless of color.
Differences in radio properties are likely nuclear-scale phenomena.
Abstract
The observed optical colors of quasars are generally interpreted in one of two frameworks: unified models which attribute color to random orientation of the accretion disk along the line-of-sight, and evolutionary models which invoke connections between quasar systems and their environments. We test these schema by probing the dark matter halo environments of optically-selected quasars as a function of optical color by measuring the two-point correlation functions of 0.34 million eBOSS quasars as well as the gravitational deflection of cosmic microwave background photons around 0.66 million XDQSO photometric quasar candidates. We do not detect a trend of halo bias with optical color through either analysis, finding that optically-selected quasars at occupy halos of characteristic mass regardless of their…
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