Clustering of red Galaxies near the Radio-loud Quasar 1335.8+2834 at z=1.1

Abstract

We have obtained new deep optical and near-infrared images of the field of the radio-loud quasar 1335.8+2834 at z=1.086 where an excess in the surface number density of galaxies was reported by Hutchings et al. [AJ, 106, 1324] from optical data. We found a significant clustering of objects with very red optical-near infrared colors, 4 R-K 6 and 3 I-K 5 near the quasar. The colors and magnitudes of the reddest objects are consistent with those of old (12 Gyr old at z=0) passively-evolving elliptical galaxies seen at z=1.1, clearly defining a `red envelope' like that found in galaxy clusters at similar or lower redshifts. This evidence strongly suggests that the quasar resides in a moderately-rich cluster of galaxies (richness-class ≥ 0). There is also a relatively large fraction of objects with moderately red colors (3.5 < R-K < 4.5) which have a distribution on the sky similar to that of the reddest objects. They may be interpreted as cluster galaxies with some recent or on-going star formation.

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