4.7 Article

GALAXY CLUSTERING AND PROJECTED DENSITY PROFILES AS TRACED BY SATELLITES IN PHOTOMETRIC SURVEYS: METHODOLOGY AND LUMINOSITY DEPENDENCE

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 734, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/734/2/88

Keywords

cosmology: observations; dark matter; galaxies: distances and redshifts; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: statistics; large-scale structure of universe

Funding

  1. NSFC [10821302, 10878001]
  2. CAS [KJCX2-YW-T05]
  3. 973 Program [2007CB815402]
  4. CAS/SAFEA [KJCX2-YW-T23]

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We develop a new method which measures the projected density distribution w(p)(r(p))n of photometric galaxies surrounding a set of spectroscopically identified galaxies and simultaneously the projected cross-correlation function w(p)(r(p)) between the two populations. In this method, we are able to divide the photometric galaxies into subsamples in luminosity intervals even when redshift information is unavailable, enabling us to measure w(p)(r(p)) n and w(p)(r(p)) as a function of not only the luminosity of the spectroscopic galaxy, but also that of the photometric galaxy. Extensive tests show that our method can measure w(p)(r(p)) in a statistically unbiased way. The accuracy of the measurement depends on the validity of the assumption inherent to the method that the foreground/background galaxies are randomly distributed and are thus uncorrelated with those galaxies of interest. Therefore, our method can be applied to the cases where foreground/background galaxies are distributed in large volumes, which is usually valid in real observations. We have applied our method to data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) including a sample of 10(5) luminous red galaxies at z similar to 0.4 and a sample of about half a million galaxies at z similar to 0.1, both of which are cross-correlated with a deep photometric sample drawn from the SDSS. On large scales, the relative bias factor of galaxies measured from wp (rp) at z similar to 0.4 depends on luminosity in a manner similar to what is found for those at z similar to 0.1, which are usually probed by autocorrelations of spectroscopic samples in previous studies. On scales smaller than a few Mpc and at both z similar to 0.4 and z similar to 0.1, the photometric galaxies of different luminosities exhibit similar density profiles around spectroscopic galaxies at fixed luminosity and redshift. This provides clear observational support for the assumption commonly adopted in halo occupation distribution models that satellite galaxies of different luminosities are distributed in a similar way, following the dark matter distribution within their host halos.

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