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We present the results from a study of the host galaxies of 15 optically selected AGNs with 0.5<z<1.1 from GEMS. GEMS is a Hubble Space Telescope imaging survey of a ~28x28 contiguous field centered on the Chandra Deep Field South in the F606W and F850LP filter bands. It incorporates the SEDs and redshifts of ~10000 objects, obtained by the COMBO-17 project. We have detected the host galaxies of all 15 AGNs in the F850LP-band (and 13/15 in the F606W-band), recovering their fluxes, morphologies and structural parameters. We find that 80% of the host galaxies have early-type (bulge-dominated) morphologies, while the rest have structures characteristic of late-type (disk-dominated) galaxies. We find that 25% of the early types, and 30% of the late types, exhibit disturbances consistent with galaxy interactions. The hosts show a wide range of colors, from those of red-sequence galaxies to blue colors consistent with ongoing star formation. Roughly 70% of the morphologically early-type hosts have rest-frame blue colors, a much larger fraction than those typical of non-active morphologically early-type galaxies in this redshift and luminosity range. Yet, we find that the early-type hosts are structurally similar to red-sequence ellipticals, inasmuch as they follow an absolute magnitude versus half-light size correlation that are consistent with the mean relation for early-type galaxies at similar redshifts.
We have performed HST imaging of a sample of 23 high-redshift (1.8<z<2.75) AGN, drawn from the COMBO-17 survey. The sample contains moderately luminous quasars (M_B ~ -23). The data are part of the GEMS imaging survey that provides high resolution op
We present near-infrared H-band imaging of 15 intermediate redshift (0.5<z<1) radio quiet quasars (RQQ) in order to characterize the properties of their host galaxies. We are able to clearly detect the surrounding nebulosity in 12 objects, whereas th
We present evidence that AGN do not reside in ``special environments, but instead show large-scale clustering determined by the properties of their host galaxies. Our study is based on an angular cross-correlation analysis applied to X-ray selected A
We present new imaging and spectroscopic observations of the fields of five QSOs with very strong intervening CaII absorption systems at redshifts z<0.5 selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Recent studies of these very rare absorbers indicate
We perform a quantitative morphological comparison between the hosts of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) and quiescent galaxies at intermediate redshifts (z~0.7). The imaging data are taken from the large HST/ACS mosaics of the GEMS and STAGES surveys. O