Abstract
In the standard picture of structure formation, the first massive galaxies
are expected to form at the highest peaks of the density field, which
constitute the cores of massive proto-clusters. Luminous quasars (QSOs) at z~4
are the most strongly clustered population known, and should thus reside in
massive dark matter halos surrounded by large overdensities of galaxies,
implying a strong QSO-galaxy cross-correlation function. We observed six z~4
QSO fields with VLT/FORS exploiting a novel set of narrow band filters custom
designed to select Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) in a thin redshift slice of
Delta_z~0.3, mitigating the projection effects that have limited the
sensitivity of previous searches for galaxies around z>~4 QSOs. We find that
LBGs are strongly clustered around QSOs, and present the first measurement of
the QSO-LBG cross-correlation function at z~4, on scales of 0.1<~R<~9 Mpc/h
(comoving). Assuming a power law form for the cross-correlation function
xi=(r/r0_QG)^gamma, we measure r0_QG=8.83^+1.39_-1.51 Mpc/h for a fixed
slope of gamma=2.0. This result is in agreement with the expected
cross-correlation length deduced from measurements of the QSO and LBG
auto-correlation function, and assuming a linear bias model. We also measure a
strong auto-correlation of LBGs in our QSO fields finding
r0_GG=21.59^+1.72_-1.69 Mpc/h for a fixed slope of gamma=1.5, which is ~4
times larger than the LBG auto-correlation length in random fields, providing
further evidence that QSOs reside in overdensities of LBGs. Our results
qualitatively support a picture where luminous QSOs inhabit exceptionally
massive (M_halo>10^12 M_sun) dark matter halos at z~4.
Description
[1701.01114] Strong Clustering of Lyman Break Galaxies around Luminous Quasars at z~4
Links and resources
Tags