The 2QDES Pilot: the luminosity and redshift dependence of quasar clustering

2016 
We present a new redshift survey, the 2dF Quasar Dark Energy Survey pilot (2QDESp), which consists of a parts per thousand 10 000 quasars from a parts per thousand 150 deg(2) of the southern sky, based on VST-ATLAS imaging and 2dF/AAOmega spectroscopy. Combining our optical photometry with the WISE (W1,W2) bands we can select essentially contamination free quasar samples with 0.8 < z < 2.5 and g < 20.5. At fainter magnitudes, optical UVX selection is still required to reach our g a parts per thousand 22.5 limit. Using both these techniques we observed quasar redshifts at sky densities up to 90 deg(-2). By comparing 2QDESp with other surveys (SDSS, 2QZ and 2SLAQ) we find that quasar clustering is approximately luminosity independent, with results for all four surveys consistent with a correlation scale of r(0) = 6.1 +/- 0.1 h(-1) Mpc, despite their decade range in luminosity. We find a significant redshift dependence of clustering, particularly when BOSS data with r(0) = 7.3 +/- 0.1 h(-1) Mpc are included at z a parts per thousand 2.4. All quasars remain consistent with having a single host halo mass of a parts per thousand 2 +/- 1 x 10(12) h(-1) M-aS (TM). This result implies that either quasars do not radiate at a fixed fraction of the Eddington luminosity or AGN black hole and dark matter halo masses are weakly correlated. No significant evidence is found to support fainter, X-ray selected quasars at low redshift having larger halo masses as predicted by the 'hot halo' mode AGN model of Fanidakis et al. (2013). Finally, although the combined quasar sample reaches an effective volume as large as that of the original SDSS LRG sample, we do not detect the BAO feature in these data.
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