The Canada-France deep fields survey-I: 100,000 galaxies, 1 deg^2: a precise measurement of \omega(\theta) to IAB~25
H.J. McCracken (LAM), O. Le Fevre (LAM), M. Brodwin (UofT), S. Foucaud, (LAM), S.J. Lilly (HIA), D. Crampton (HIA), Y. Mellier (IAP)

TL;DR
This study measures the angular correlation function of 100,000 galaxies up to IAB~25.5 across four fields, revealing how galaxy clustering varies with magnitude and color, and discussing implications for cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides a precise measurement of () for a large galaxy sample and analyzes its dependence on magnitude, color, and redshift distribution, offering new insights into galaxy clustering.
Findings
() decreases monotonically to IAB~25.
At bright magnitudes, () follows a power-law with slope -0.8.
Fainter galaxies show a shallower slope -0.6.
Abstract
(abridged) Using the UH8K mosaic camera, we have measured the angular correlation function \omega(\theta) for 100,000 galaxies over four widely separated fields totalling ~1\deg^2 and reaching IAB~25.5. With this sample we investigate the dependence of \omega(\theta) at 1', A_\omega(1'), on sample median IAB magnitude in the range 19.5<I(AB-med)<24. Our results show that A_\omega(1') decreases monotonically to IAB~25. At bright magnitudes, \omega(\theta) is consistent with a power-law of slope \delta = -0.8 for 0.2'<\theta<3.0' but at fainter magnitudes we find \delta ~ -0.6. At the 3\sigma level, our observations are still consistent with \delta=-0.8. Furthermore, in the magnitude ranges 18.5<IAB<24.0 and 18.5<IAB<23.0 we find galaxies with 2.6<(V-I)AB<2.9 have A_\omega(1')'s which are ~10x higher than field values. We demonstrate that our model redshift distributions for the faint…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
