4.7 Article

The SDSS-DR12 large-scale cross-correlation of damped Lyman alpha systems with the Lyman alpha forest

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 473, Issue 3, Pages 3019-3038

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stx2525

Keywords

galaxies: intergalactic medium; cosmology: cosmological parameters; cosmology: observations; cosmology: large-scale structure of the Universe

Funding

  1. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. US Department of Energy Office of Science
  4. University of Arizona
  5. Brazilian Participation Group
  6. Brookhaven National Laboratory
  7. University of Cambridge
  8. Carnegie Mellon University
  9. University of Florida
  10. French Participation Group
  11. German Participation Group
  12. Harvard University
  13. Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias
  14. Michigan State/Notre Dame/JINA Participation Group
  15. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  16. Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
  17. Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics
  18. New Mexico State University
  19. New York University
  20. Ohio State University
  21. Pennsylvania State University
  22. University of Portsmouth
  23. Princeton University
  24. Spanish Participation Group
  25. University of Tokyo
  26. University of Utah
  27. Vanderbilt University
  28. University of Virginia
  29. University of Washington
  30. Yale University
  31. Spanish MINECO [AYA2012-33938, AYA2015-71091-P, MDM-2014-0369]
  32. STFC Rutherford Fellowship [ST/N003853/1]
  33. NASA through Einstein Post-doctoral Fellowship Award [PF5-160133]
  34. STFC [ST/N003853/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We present a measurement of the damped Ly alpha absorber (DLA) mean bias from the cross-correlation of DLAs and the Ly alpha forest, updating earlier results of Font-Ribera et al. (2012) with the final Baryon Oscillations Spectroscopic Survey data release and an improved method to address continuum fitting corrections. Our cross-correlation is well fitted by linear theory with the standard Lambda CDM model, with a DLA bias of b(DLA) = 1.99 +/- 0.11; a more conservative analysis, which removes DLA in the Ly beta forest and uses only the cross-correlation at r > 10 h(-1) Mpc, yields b(DLA) = 2.00 +/- 0.19. This assumes the cosmological model from Planck Collaboration (2016) and the Ly a forest bias factors of Bautista et al. (2017) and includes only statistical errors obtained from bootstrap analysis. The main systematic errors arise from possible impurities and selection effects in the DLA catalogue and from uncertainties in the determination of the Ly alpha forest bias factors and a correction for effects of high column density absorbers. We find no dependence of the DLA bias on column density or redshift. The measured bias value corresponds to a host halo mass similar to 4 x 10(11) h(-1)M(circle dot) if all DLAs were hosted in haloes of a similar mass. In a realistic model where host haloes over a broad mass range have a DLA cross-section Sigma(M-h) proportional to M-h(alpha) down to M-h > M-min = 10(8.5) h(-1)M(circle dot), we find that alpha > 1 is required to have b(DLA) > 1.7, implying a steeper relation or higher value of M-min than is generally predicted in numerical simulations of galaxy formation.

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