Wide-field mid-infrared and millimetre imaging of the high-redshift radio galaxy, 4C41.17
T.R. Greve (1), D. Stern (2), R.J. Ivison (3), C. De Breuck (4), A., Kov\'acs (5), F. Bertoldi (6) ((1) Caltech, (2) JPL, (3) UK ATC/IfA, Edinburgh, (4) ESO, (5) MPIfR, (6) AlfA Bonn)

TL;DR
This study uses deep submillimeter and millimeter imaging to explore the environment of the high-redshift radio galaxy 4C41.17, revealing multiple SMGs and their redshift distribution, and assessing their physical association with the galaxy.
Contribution
First detailed submillimeter/millimeter imaging of 4C41.17's environment, identifying multiple SMGs and analyzing their redshifts and spatial distribution relative to the radio galaxy.
Findings
Detected 14 SMGs in the field around 4C41.17.
Most SMGs are at lower redshifts than the radio galaxy.
SMG over-density decreases with distance from 4C41.17.
Abstract
We present deep 350- and 1200-micron imaging of the region around 4C41.17 -- one of the most distant (z = 3.792) and luminous known radio galaxies -- obtained with the Submillimeter High Angular Resolution Camera (SHARC-II) and the Max Planck Millimeter Bolometer Array (MAMBO). The radio galaxy is robustly detected at 350- and 1200-micron, as are two nearby 850-micron-selected galaxies; a third 850-micron source is detected at 350-micron and coincides with a ~ 2-sigma feature in the 1200-micron map. Further away from the radio galaxy an additional nine sources are detected at 1200-micron, bringing the total number of detected (sub)millimeter selected galaxies (SMGs) in this field to 14. Using radio images from the Very Large Array (VLA) and Spitzer mid-infrared (mid-IR) data, we find statistically robust radio and/or 24-micron counterparts to eight of the 14 SMGs in the field around…
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