ODIN: Clustering Properties of Ly$α$ Blobs at $z$ $\sim$ 2.4 and 3.1
Abstract: Spatially extended Ly$α$ nebulae, known as Ly$α$ blobs (LABs), are a rare population at $z > 2$ that are thought to trace proto-groups or the progenitors of massive galaxies in the present-day universe. However, their dark matter halo properties (e.g., halo mass) are still uncertain due to their rarity and strong field-to-field variation. The One-hundred-deg$2$ DECam Imaging in Narrowbands (ODIN) survey has discovered 103 and 112 LABs in the extended ($\sim$9~\sqdeg) COSMOS field at $z\sim2.4$ and 3.1, respectively, enabling estimation of their bias and host halo masses through clustering analysis. We measure the angular auto-correlation functions (ACFs) of LABs and derive galaxy bias factors of $b$ = $4.0\pm0.8$ and $3.8\pm0.7$, corresponding to minimum halo masses of $2.8{+3.0}_{-1.8}$ and $0.7{+0.8}{-0.5}\times10{12}~M\odot$ and median halo masses of $4.2{+3.8}_{-2.5}$ and $1.1{+1.1}{-0.7}\times10{12}~M\odot$ at $z\sim2.4$ and 3.1, respectively. LABs occupy $\sim$11${+39}_{-8}$\% and $\sim$3${+9}_{-2}$\% of all dark matter halos above these minimum halo masses. These findings suggest that LABs inhabit massive dark matter halos, likely tracing proto-group environments that evolve into present-day massive halos ($\sim$10${13}~M_\odot$), where massive elliptical galaxies or galaxy groups reside, by $z=0$.
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