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The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: higher-order galaxy correlation functions

Authors :
Croton, D. J.
Gaztañaga, E.
Baugh, C. M.
Norberg, P.
Colless, M.
Baldry, I. K.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Bridges, T.
Cannon, R.
Cole, S.
Collins, C.
Couch, W.
Dalton, G.
De Propris, R.
Driver, S. P.
Efstathiou, G.
Ellis, R. S.
Frenk, C. S.
Glazebrook, K.
Jackson, C.
Lahav, O.
Lewis, I.
Lumsden, S.
Maddox, S.
Madgwick, D.
Peacock, J. A.
Peterson, B. A.
Sutherland, W.
Taylor, K.
Croton, D. J.
Gaztañaga, E.
Baugh, C. M.
Norberg, P.
Colless, M.
Baldry, I. K.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Bridges, T.
Cannon, R.
Cole, S.
Collins, C.
Couch, W.
Dalton, G.
De Propris, R.
Driver, S. P.
Efstathiou, G.
Ellis, R. S.
Frenk, C. S.
Glazebrook, K.
Jackson, C.
Lahav, O.
Lewis, I.
Lumsden, S.
Maddox, S.
Madgwick, D.
Peacock, J. A.
Peterson, B. A.
Sutherland, W.
Taylor, K.

Abstract

We measure moments of the galaxy count probability distribution function in the Two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS). The survey is divided into volume-limited subsamples in order to examine the dependence of the higher-order clustering on galaxy luminosity. We demonstrate the hierarchical scaling of the averaged p-point galaxy correlation functions, , up to p= 6. The hierarchical amplitudes, , are approximately independent of the cell radius used to smooth the galaxy distribution on small to medium scales. On larger scales we find that the higher-order moments can be strongly affected by the presence of rare, massive superstructures in the galaxy distribution. The skewness S3 has a weak dependence on luminosity, approximated by a linear dependence on log luminosity. We discuss the implications of our results for simple models of linear and non-linear bias that relate the galaxy distribution to the underlying mass

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn999828086
Document Type :
Electronic Resource