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Article overview
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Counts-in-Cylinders in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with Comparisons to N-body Simulations | Heather D. Berrier
; Elizabeth J. Barton
; Joel C. Berrier
; James S. Bullock
; Andrew R. Zentner
; Risa H. Wechsler
; | Date: |
26 Oct 2010 | Abstract: | Environmental statistics provide a necessary means of comparing the
properties of galaxies in different environments and a vital test of models of
galaxy formation within the prevailing, hierarchical cosmological model. We
explore counts-in-cylinders, a common statistic defined as the number of
companions of a particular galaxy found within a given projected radius and
redshift interval. Galaxy distributions with the same two-point correlation
functions do not necessarily have the same companion count distributions. We
use this statistic to examine the environments of galaxies in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey, Data Release 4. We also make preliminary comparisons to four models
for the spatial distributions of galaxies, based on N-body simulations, and
data from SDSS DR4 to study the utility of the counts-in-cylinders statistic.
There is a very large scatter between the number of companions a galaxy has and
the mass of its parent dark matter halo and the halo occupation, limiting the
utility of this statistic for certain kinds of environmental studies. We also
show that prevalent, empirical models of galaxy clustering that match observed
two- and three-point clustering statistics well fail to reproduce some aspects
of the observed distribution of counts-in-cylinders on 1, 3 and 6-Mpc/h scales.
All models that we explore underpredict the fraction of galaxies with few or no
companions in 3 and 6-Mpc/h cylinders. Roughly 7% of galaxies in the real
universe are significantly more isolated within a 6 Mpc/h cylinder than the
galaxies in any of the models we use. Simple, phenomenological models that map
galaxies to dark matter halos fail to reproduce high-order clustering
statistics in low-density environments. | Source: | arXiv, 1010.5518 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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