The clustering of typical Lyα emitters from z 2.5 - 6: host halo masses depend on Lyα and UV luminosities

Abstract

We investigate the clustering and halo properties of 5000 Lyα-selected emission line galaxies (LAEs) from the Slicing COSMOS 4K (SC4K) and from archival NB497 imaging of SA22 split in 15 discrete redshift slices between z 2.5 - 6. We measure clustering lengths of r0 3 - 6\ h-1 Mpc and typical halo masses of 1011 M for our narrowband-selected LAEs with typical LLyα 1042 - 43 erg s-1. The intermediate band-selected LAEs are observed to have r0 3.5 - 15\ h-1 Mpc with typical halo masses of 1011 - 12 M and typical LLyα 1043 - 43.6 erg s-1. We find a strong, redshift-independent correlation between halo mass and Lyα luminosity normalized by the characteristic Lyα luminosity, L(z). The faintest LAEs (L 0.1\ L(z)) typically identified by deep narrowband surveys are found in 1010 M halos and the brightest LAEs (L 7\ L(z)) are found in 5 × 1012 M halos. A dependency on the rest-frame 1500 ~UV luminosity, MUV, is also observed where the halo masses increase from 1011 to 1013 M for MUV -19 to -23.5 mag. Halo mass is also observed to increase from 109.8 to 1012.3 M for dust-corrected UV star formation rates from 0.6 to 10 M yr-1 and continues to increase up to 1013.5 M in halo mass, where the majority of those sources are AGN. All the trends we observe are found to be redshift-independent. Our results reveal that LAEs are the likely progenitors of a wide range of galaxies depending on their luminosity, from dwarf-like, to Milky Way-type, to bright cluster galaxies. LAEs therefore provide unique insight into the early formation and evolution of the galaxies we observe in the local Universe.

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