Red Galaxy Clustering in the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey
release_sr2b6fwuyrbrhncyc6ehgmyrxe
by
Michael J. I. Brown,
Arjun Dey,
Buell T. Jannuzi,
Tod R. Lauer ,
Glenn P. Tiede,
Valerie J. Mikles
2003
Abstract
We have measured the clustering of z<0.9 red galaxies and constrained models
of the evolution of large-scale structure using the initial 1.2 sq. degree data
release of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS). The area and BwRI passbands
of the NDWFS allow samples of >1000 galaxies to be selected as a function of
spectral type, absolute magnitude, and photometric redshift. Spectral synthesis
models can be used to predict the colors and luminosities of a galaxy
population as a function of redshift. We have used PEGASE2 models, with
exponentially declining star formation rates, to estimate the observed colors
and luminosity evolution of galaxies and to connect, as an evolutionary
sequence, related populations of galaxies at different redshifts. A red galaxy
sample, with present-day rest-frame Vega colors of Bw-R>1.44, was chosen to
allow comparisons with the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey and Sloan Digital Sky
Survey. We find the spatial clustering of red galaxies to be a strong function
of luminosity, with r0 increasing from 4.4+/-0.4 Mpc/h at M_R=-20 to 11.2+/-1.0
Mpc/h at M_R=-22. Clustering evolution measurements using samples where the
rest-frame selection criteria vary with redshift, including all deep
single-band magnitude limited samples, are biased due to the correlation of
clustering with rest-frame color and luminosity. The clustering of M_R=-21,
Bw-R>1.44 galaxies exhibits no significant evolution over the redshift range
observed with r0= 6.3+/-0.5 Mpc/h in comoving coordinates. This is consistent
with recent LCDM models where the bias of L* galaxies undergoes rapid evolution
and r0 evolves very slowly at z<2.
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