Abstract

We present the galaxy two-point angular correlation function for galaxies selected from the seventh data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The galaxy sample was selected with $r$-band apparent magnitudes between 17 and 21; and we measure the correlation function for the full sample as well as for the four magnitude ranges: 17-18, 18-19, 19-20, and 20-21. We update the flag criteria to select a clean galaxy catalog and detail specific tests that we perform to characterize systematic effects, including the effects of seeing, Galactic extinction, and the overall survey uniformity. Notably, we find that optimally we can use observed regions with seeing $< 1\farcs5$, and $r$-band extinction < 0.13 magnitudes, smaller than previously published results. Furthermore, we confirm that the uniformity of the SDSS photometry is minimally affected by the stripe geometry. We find that, overall, the two-point angular correlation function can be described by a power law, $\omega(\theta) = A_\omega \theta^{(1-\gamma)}$ with $\gamma \simeq 1.72$, over the range $0\fdg005$--$10\degr$. We also find similar relationships for the four magnitude subsamples, but the amplitude within the same angular interval for the four subsamples is found to decrease with fainter magnitudes, in agreement with previous results. We find that the systematic signals are well below the galaxy angular correlation function for angles less than approximately $5\degr$, which limits the modeling of galaxy angular correlations on larger scales. Finally, we present our custom, highly parallelized two-point correlation code that we used in this analysis.

Highlights

  • One of the most powerful and simplest probes of the galaxy distribution is the two-point angular correlation function, which quantifies the excess probability above a random distribution of finding one galaxy within a specified angle of another galaxy

  • The complete procedure required to go from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data archive to our final galaxy sample is detailed in Appendix A; we provide an overview of this process

  • We are especially interested in the large angle cross-correlation function values (∼ 5◦, where the reddening cross-correlation signal is of similar scale to the galaxy correlation)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One of the most powerful and simplest probes of the galaxy distribution is the two-point angular correlation function, which quantifies the excess probability above a random distribution of finding one galaxy within a specified angle of another galaxy. The two-point angular correlation function has been studied at bright magnitudes from the data releases from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) such as the Early Data Release (EDR; Connolly et al 2002). This data release covered a few hundred square degrees of the in sky, and the twopoint galaxy angular correlation function was calculated on scales from a few arc seconds to a few degrees. The power law relation of the small-scale correlation function held, with the amplitude decreasing at fainter magnitudes (Connolly et al 2002)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call