Discovery of a galaxy overdensity around a powerful, heavily obscured FRII radio galaxy at z=1.7: star formation promoted by large-scale AGN feedback?
R. Gilli, M. Mignoli, A. Peca, R. Nanni, I. Prandoni, E. Liuzzo, Q., D'Amato, M. Brusa, F. Calura, G.B. Caminha, M. Chiaberge, A. Comastri, O., Cucciati, F. Cusano, P. Grandi, E. Decarli, G. Lanzuisi, F. Mannucci, E., Pinna, P. Tozzi, E. Vanzella, C. Vignali, F. Vito

TL;DR
This study discovers a galaxy overdensity around a heavily obscured FRII radio galaxy at z=1.7, showing evidence of large-scale AGN feedback promoting star formation through shock-heated gas and diffuse X-ray emission.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of positive AGN feedback on cosmological scales via shock-heated gas and star formation promotion around a distant FRII galaxy.
Findings
Galaxy overdensity at z=1.7 with active star-forming galaxies.
Diffuse X-ray emission extending 240 kpc around the FRII lobe.
Star formation likely promoted by AGN-driven shock heating.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a galaxy overdensity around a Compton-thick Fanaroff-Riley type II (FRII) radio galaxy at z=1.7 in the deep multiband survey around the z=6.3 QSO SDSS J1030+0524. Based on a 6hr VLT/MUSE and on a 4hr LBT/LUCI observation, we identify at least eight galaxy members in this structure with spectroscopic redshift z=1.687-1.699, including the FRII galaxy at z=1.699. Most of the identified overdensity members are blue, compact galaxies that are actively forming stars at rates of 8-60 yr. Based on a 500ks Chandra ACIS-I observation we found that the FRII nucleus hosts a luminous QSO ( erg s, intrinsic and rest-frame) that is obscured by Compton-thick absorption ( cm). Our Chandra observation, the deepest so far for a distant FRII within a galaxy overdensity, revealed…
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