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The host dark matter haloes of [O II] emitters at 0.5 < z < 1.5

Authors :
Gonzalez-Perez, V
Comparat, J
Norberg, P
Baugh, CM
Contreras, S
Lacey, C
McCullagh, N
Orsi, A
Helly, J
Humphries, J
Publisher :
Oxford University Press

Abstract

Emission line galaxies (ELGs) are used in several ongoing and upcoming surveys (SDSS-IV/eBOSS, DESI) as tracers of the dark matter distribution. Using a new galaxy formation model, we explore the characteristics of [OII] emitters, which dominate optical ELG selections at z ≃ 1. Model [OII] emitters at 0.5 &lt; z &lt; 1.5 are selected to mimic the DEEP2, VVDS, eBOSS and DESI surveys. The luminosity functions of model [OII] emitters are in reasonable agreement with observations. The selected [OII] emitters are hosted by haloes with Mhalo ≥ 1010.3h−1M⊙, with ∼90 per cent of them being central star-forming galaxies. The predicted mean halo occupation distributions of [OII] emitters have a shape typical of that inferred for star-forming galaxies, with the contribution from central galaxies, ⟨N⟩[OII]cen⁠, being far from the canonical step function. The ⟨N⟩[OII]cen can be described as the sum of an asymmetric Gaussian for discs and a step function for spheroids, which plateau below unity. The model [OII] emitters have a clustering bias close to unity, which is below the expectations for eBOSS and DESI ELGs. At z ∼ 1, a comparison with observed g-band-selected galaxy, which is expected to be dominated by [OII] emitters, indicates that our model produces too few [OII] emitters that are satellite galaxies. This suggests the need to revise our modelling of hot gas stripping in satellite galaxies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....50ac35a8f46feb67f1f21648ecde2815