Cross-correlations between the CLAMATO Lyman-alpha forest and galaxies within the COSMOS field
Abstract
We compute the 3D cross-correlation between the absorption of the z 2.3 Lyman-alpha forest measured by the COSMOS Lyman-Alpha Mapping And Tomography Observations (CLAMATO) survey, and 1642 foreground galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts from several different surveys, including 3D-HST, CLAMATO, zCOSMOS-deep, MOSDEF, and VUDS. For each survey, we compare the measured cross-correlation with models incorporating the galaxy linear bias as well as observed redshift dispersion and systematic redshift offset. The derived redshift dispersion and offsets are generally consistent with those expected from, e.g., spectroscopic redshifts measured with UV absorption lines or NIR emission lines observed with specific instruments, but we find hints of `fingers-of-god' caused by overdensities in the field. We combine our foreground galaxy sample, and split them into 3 bins of robustly-estimated stellar mass in order to study the stellar mass-halo mass relationship. For sub-samples with median stellar masses of 10(M* / M) = [9.28,9.74,10.22], we find galaxy biases of bg≈ [2.1, 3.2,3.8], respectively. A comparison with mock measurements from the Bolshoi-Planck N-body simulation yields corresponding halo masses of 10(M* / M) ≈ [10.5,11.7,12.1] for these stellar mass bins. At the low mass end, our results suggest enhanced star formation histories in mild tension with predictions from previous angular correlation and abundance matching-based observations, and the IllustrisTNG simulation.
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