An excess of star-forming galaxies in the fields of high-redshift QSOs
J.A. Stevens, Matt J. Jarvis, K.E.K. Coppin, M.J. Page, T.R. Greve,, F.J. Carrera, R.J. Ivison

TL;DR
This study reveals an excess of star-forming galaxies around high-redshift QSOs, indicating these regions are sites of intense early universe star formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed submillimetre and mid-infrared analysis of QSO fields, showing enhanced galaxy density and star formation activity compared to blank fields.
Findings
Excess of submillimetre galaxies in QSO fields at 2-4 mJy flux densities.
Mid-infrared colours suggest no strong evidence of buried AGN in SMGs.
Star formation activity is lower around QSOs than near more powerful radio-loud AGN.
Abstract
We present submillimetre and mid-infrared imaging observations of five fields centred on quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) at 1.7<z<2.8. All 5 QSOs were detected previously at submillimetre wavelengths. At 850 (450) um we detect 17 (11) submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) in addition to the QSOs. The total area mapped at 850 um is ~28 arcmin^2 down to RMS noise levels of 1-2 mJy/beam, depending on the field. Integral number counts are computed from the 850 um data using the same analytical techniques adopted by `blank-field' submillimetre surveys. We find that the `QSO-field' counts show a clear excess over the blank-field counts at deboosted flux densities of 2-4 mJy; at higher flux densities the counts are consistent with the blank-field counts. Robust mid-infrared counterparts are identified for all four submillimetre detected QSOs and ~60 per cent of the SMGs. The mid-infrared colours of the…
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