4.7 Article

QUASAR CLUSTERING FROM SDSS DR5: DEPENDENCES ON PHYSICAL PROPERTIES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 697, Issue 2, Pages 1656-1673

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/697/2/1656

Keywords

black hole physics; cosmology: observations; galaxies: active; large-scale structure of universe; quasars: general; surveys

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-0707266, AST-0607634]
  2. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  3. Participating Institutions
  4. National Science Foundation
  5. U. S. Department of Energy
  6. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  7. Japanese Monbukagakusho
  8. Max Planck Society
  9. Higher Education Funding Council for England

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Using a homogenous sample of 38,208 quasars with a sky coverage of similar to 4000 deg(2) drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release Five quasar catalog, we study the dependence of quasar clustering on luminosity, virial black hole (BH) mass, quasar color, and radio loudness. At z < 2.5, quasar clustering depends weakly on luminosity and virial BH mass, with typical uncertainty levels similar to 10% for the measured correlation lengths. These weak dependences are consistent with models in which substantial scatter between quasar luminosity, virial BH mass, and the host dark matter halo mass has diluted any clustering difference, where halo mass is assumed to be the relevant quantity that best correlates with clustering strength. However, the most luminous and most massive quasars are more strongly clustered (at the similar to 2 sigma level) than the remainder of the sample, which we attribute to the rapid increase of the bias factor at the high-mass end of host halos. We do not observe a strong dependence of clustering strength on quasar colors within our sample. On the other hand, radio-loud quasars are more strongly clustered than are radio-quiet quasars matched in redshift and optical luminosity (or virial BH mass), consistent with local observations of radio galaxies and radio-loud type 2 active galactic nuclei. Thus, radio-loud quasars reside in more massive and denser environments in the biased halo clustering picture. Using the Sheth et al. (2001) formula for the linear halo bias, the estimated host halo mass for radio-loud quasars is similar to 10(13) h(-1) M-circle dot, compared to similar to 2 x 10(12) h(-1) M-circle dot for radio-quiet quasar hosts at z similar to 1.5.

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