Clustering of red and blue galaxies around high-redshift 3C radio sources as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope
Zohreh Ghaffari, Martin Haas, Marco Chiaberge, S. P. Willner, Rolf, Chini, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Roberto de Propris, and Michael West

TL;DR
This study investigates the clustering of red and blue galaxies around high-redshift 3C radio sources using Hubble Space Telescope images, revealing diverse overdensity patterns and potential evolutionary trends in galaxy cluster development.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental properties of high-redshift radio galaxies and quasars, highlighting the diversity of galaxy overdensities and possible quenching effects of quasar activity.
Findings
Approximately 76% of sources inhabit galaxy overdensities.
Evolutionary trends suggest proto-clusters at z > 1.6 and mature clusters at z < 1.2.
Few sources show blue overdensities, indicating star-formation quenching.
Abstract
To properly understand the evolution of high-redshift galaxy clusters, both passive and star-forming galaxies have to be considered. Here we study the clustering environment of 21 radio galaxies and quasars at 1<z<2.5 from the third Cambridge catalog (3C). We use optical and near-infrared Hubble Space Telescope images with a 2' field-of-view, where the filters encompass the rest-frame 4000 Angstroem break. Passive red and star-forming blue galaxies were separated in the color--magnitude diagram using a redshift-dependent cut derived from galaxy evolution models. We find that about 16 of 21 radio sources inhabit a galaxy overdensity on scales of 250 kpc (30") projected radius. The sample shows a diversity of red and blue overdensities and also sometimes a deficiency of blue galaxies in the center. The following tentative evolutionary trends are seen: extended proto-clusters with only…
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