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We present an analysis of the spatial clustering of 695 Ly$alpha$-emitting galaxies (LAE) in the MUSE-Wide survey. All objects have spectroscopically confirmed redshifts in the range $3.3<z<6$. We employ the K-estimator of Adelberger et al. (2005), adapted and optimized for our sample. We also explore the standard two-point correlation function approach, which is however less suited for a pencil-beam survey such as ours. The results from both approaches are consistent. We parametrize the clustering properties by, (i) modelling the clustering signal with a power law (PL), and (ii) adopting a Halo Occupation Distribution (HOD) model. Applying HOD modeling, we infer a large-scale bias of $b_{rm{HOD}}=2.80^{+0.38}_{-0.38}$ at a median redshift of the number of galaxy pairs $langle z_{rm pair}ranglesimeq3.82$, while the PL analysis results in $b_{rm{PL}}=3.03^{+1.51}_{-0.52}$ ($r_0=3.60^{+3.10}_{-0.90};h^{-1}$Mpc and $gamma=1.30^{+0.36}_{-0.45}$). The implied typical dark matter halo (DMH) mass is $log(M_{rm{DMH}}/[h^{-1}rm{M}_odot])=11.34^{+0.23}_{-0.27}$. We study possible dependencies of the clustering signal on object properties by bisecting the sample into disjoint subsets, considering Ly$alpha$ luminosity, UV absolute magnitude, Ly$alpha$ equivalent width, and redshift as variables. We find a suggestive trend of more luminous Ly$alpha$ emitters residing in more massive DMHs than their lower Ly$alpha$ luminosity counterparts. We also compare our results to mock LAE catalogs based on a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation and find a stronger clustering signal than in our observed sample. By adopting a galaxy-conserving model we estimate that the LAEs in the MUSE-Wide survey will typically evolve into galaxies hosted by halos of $log(M_{rm{DMH}}/[h^{-1}rm{M}_odot])approx13.5$ at redshift zero, suggesting that we observe the ancestors of present-day galaxy groups.
We present a clustering analysis of a sample of 238 Ly{$alpha$}-emitters at redshift 3<z<6 from the MUSE-Wide survey. This survey mosaics extragalactic legacy fields with 1h MUSE pointings to detect statistically relevant samples of emission line gal
(Abridged) We investigate the Lyman $alpha$ emitter luminosity function (LAE LF) within the redshift range $2.9 leq z leq 6$ from the first instalment of the blind integral field spectroscopic survey MUSE-Wide. This initial part of the survey probes
We present the results of the extensive narrow-band survey of Lyalpha emission-line objects at z=3.1 in the 1.38 deg^2 area surrounding the high density region of star-forming galaxies at z=3.09 in the SSA22 field, as well as in the 1.04 deg^2 area o
Aims. The aim of this work is to constrain the evolution of the fraction of Lya emitters among UV selected star forming galaxies at 2<z<6, and to measure the stellar escape fraction of Lya photons over the same redshift range. Methods. We exploit the
Context. Searching for high-redshift galaxies is a field of intense activity in modern observational cosmology that will continue to grow with future ground-based and sky observatories. Over the last few years, a lot has been learned about the high-z