A strongly starforming group: three massive galaxies associated with a QSO
F.J. Carrera, M.J. Page, J.A. Stevens, R.J. Ivison, T. Dwelly, J., Ebrero, S. Falocco

TL;DR
This study confirms a large-scale structure around a z=1.82 QSO with massive, star-forming galaxies, revealing significant stellar mass already formed and minimal AGN activity, indicating early galaxy evolution stages.
Contribution
First photometric redshift confirmation of a large-scale structure around a high-redshift QSO with detailed SED analysis of associated submm galaxies.
Findings
Most submm sources have redshifts compatible with z=1.82.
Star formation rates around 2000 solar masses per year.
Black hole masses are still growing, with high stellar-to-black hole mass ratios.
Abstract
We present here photometric redshift confirmation of the presence of large scale structure around the z=1.82 QSO RXJ0941, which shows an overdensity of submm sources. Radio imaging confirms the presence of the submm sources and pinpoints their likely optical-NIR counterparts. Four of the five submm sources present in this field (including the QSO) have counterparts with redshifts compatible with z=1.82. We show that our photometric redshifts are robust against the use of different spectral templates. We have measured the galaxy stellar mass of the submm galaxies from their rest-frame K-band luminosity obtaining log(M*/Msun)~11.5+-0.2, slightly larger than the Schechter mass of present day galaxies, and hence indicating that most of the stellar mass is already formed. We present optical-to-radio spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the five SCUBA sources. The emission of RXJ0941 is…
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