Large Scale Overdensity of Lyman Break Galaxies Around the z=6.3 Ultraluminous Quasar J0100+2802
Maria Pudoka (1), Feige Wang (1), Xiaohui Fan (1), Jinyi Yang (1),, Jaclyn Champagne (1), Victoria Jones (1), Fuyan Bian (2), Zheng Cai (3),, Linhua Jiang (4, 5), Dezi Liu (6), Xue-Bing Wu (4, 5) ((1) University, of Arizona Steward Observatory, (2) European Southern Observatory

TL;DR
This study reveals a significant large-scale galaxy overdensity around the z=6.33 ultraluminous quasar J0100+2802, indicating its environment is part of a massive structure in the early universe.
Contribution
First wide-field imaging analysis of the quasar environment showing a large-scale galaxy overdensity at z=6.33, extending previous small-scale findings.
Findings
Galaxy overdensity of δ=4 at 8.4σ significance
Positive auto-correlation on scales less than 10 arcminutes
Evidence of spatial asymmetries in galaxy distribution
Abstract
We study the environment of the z=6.33 ultraluminous quasar SDSS J010013.02+280225.8 (J0100) to understand its association with large-scale structure. Theoretical models propose high-redshift quasars as markers of galaxy overdensities residing in the most massive dark matter halos (DMHs) in the early universe. J0100 is an ultraluminous quasar with the most massive black hole known at z>6, suggesting a high likelihood of residing in a massive DMH. We present wide-field (522 square arcminute) imaging in the r-, i-, and z-bands from the Large Binocular Camera on the Large Binocular Telescope, with Y- and J-band imaging from the Wide-field Infrared Camera on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, centered on J0100. Applying color selections, we identify 23 objects as i-droput Lyman Break Galaxy (LBG) candidates in the J0100 field. We use the deep photometric catalog in the 1.27 square…
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