4.7 Article

Quasar clustering at 25 h-1 kpc from a complete sample of binaries

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 678, Issue 2, Pages 635-646

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/533491

Keywords

cosmology : observations; large-scale structure of universe; quasars : general; surveys

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We present spectroscopy of binary quasar candidates, with component separations of 3 '' <= Delta theta < 6 '', selected from Data Release 4 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR4) using kernel density estimation (KDE). Of our 27 new quasar pair observations, 10 are binary quasars, which doubles the number of known g < 21 binaries with 3 '' <= Delta theta < 6 '' separations. Several of our observed binaries are wide-separation lens candidates that merit additional higher resolution spectroscopy, as well as deep imaging to search for lensing galaxies. Our candidates are initially selected by UV excess (u - g < 1), but are otherwise selected irrespective of the relative colors of the quasar pair, and we thus use them to suggest optimal color similarity and photometric redshift approaches for targeting binary quasars or projected quasar pairs. We find that a third or more of all binary quasars have quite dissimilar components on the basis of a typical color similarity criterion (chi(2)(color) less than or similar to 20). From a sample that is complete on proper scales of 23.7 h(-1) kpc < R(prop) < 29.9 h(-1) kpc, we determine the projected quasar correlation function to be (W) over bar (p) = 24.0(-10.8)(+16.9), which is 2 sigma lower than recent estimates. We argue that our low (W) over bar (p) estimates may indicate redshift evolution in the quasar correlation function from z similar to 1.9 to z similar to 1.4 on scales of R(prop) similar to 25 h(-1) kpc. The size of this evolution broadly tracks quasar clustering on larger scales, consistent with merger-driven models of quasar origin. Spectroscopy of all of our DR4 KDE binary quasar candidates should be sufficient to detect quasar clustering evolution at R(prop) similar to 25 h(-1) kpc for z < 2.5 in a single homogeneous sample.

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