Faint Quasars Live in the Same Number Density Environments as Lyman Break Galaxies at z ~ 4
Hisakazu Uchiyama, Masayuki Akiyama, Jun Toshikawa, Nobunari, Kashikawa, Roderik Overzier, Tohru Nagao, Kohei Ichikawa, Murilo Marinello,, Masatoshi Imanishi, Masayuki Tanaka, Yoshiki Matsuoka, Yutaka Komiyama, Shogo, Ishikawa, Masafusa Onoue, Mariko Kubo, Yuichi Harikane

TL;DR
This study finds that faint quasars at z ~ 4 are located in environments with galaxy densities similar to those of typical Lyman Break Galaxies, suggesting no strong preference for protocluster regions.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical comparison of faint quasar environments with galaxy overdensities at z ~ 4, indicating quasars are not predominantly in dense protocluster regions.
Findings
Faint quasars have similar environment densities as Lyman Break Galaxies.
Less than 1% of faint quasars are in >4 sigma overdense regions.
Quasar environments do not depend on their luminosity.
Abstract
Characterizing high-z quasar environments is key to understanding the co-evolution of quasars and the surrounding galaxies. To restrict their global picture, we statistically examine the g-dropout galaxy overdensity distribution around 570 faint quasar candidates at z ~ 4, based on the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program survey. We compare the overdensity significances of g-dropout galaxies around the quasars with those around g-dropout galaxies, and find no significant difference between their distributions. A total of 4 (22) out of the 570 faint quasars, 0.7_{-0.4}^{+0.4} (3.9_{-0.8}^{+0.8}) %, are found to be associated with the > 4 sigma overdense regions within an angular separation of 1.8 (3.0) arcmin, which is the typical size of protoclusters at this epoch. This is similar to the fraction of g-dropout galaxies associated with the > 4 sigma overdense regions. This result…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
