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We have analyzed galaxy properties in the environment of a sample of 70 Ultra Steep Spectrum (USS) radio sources selected from the Sydney University Molonglo sky Survey and the NRAO VLA Sky Survey catalogues, using near-IR data complete down to Ks=20. We have quantified galaxy excess around USS targets using an Abell-type measurement N0.5 (Hill & Lilly 1991). We find that most of the USS fields studied are compatible with being Abell class 0 richness clusters. A statistical analysis of the distribution of companion galaxies around USS radio sources show a pronounced tendency for such objects to be found in the direction defined by the radio axis, suggesting that they may be related to the presence of the radio sources. We have also measure the central concentration of light of the USS sample and compare these to the values obtained for field galaxies and galaxies selected through other methods. By using Spearman statistics to disentangle richnesses and concentration indices dependences, we detect a weak, but significant, positive correlation. We find that at z > 2 USS radio sources are more concentrated than field galaxies at similar redshifts, indicating that these objects trace the most massive systems at high redshift.
We present measurements of the clustering properties of galaxies in the field of redshift range $0.5 lesssim z lesssim 1.5$ Ultra Steep Spectrum (USS) radio sources selected from Sydney University Molonglo Sky Survey and NRAO VLA Sky Survey. Galaxies
We present the first measurement of clustering properties of low mass galaxies with a stellar mass down to M_*~10^9 Msun at 1<z<4 in 24.4 arcmin^2 of the GOODS-North region with a depth of K_{AB}~25, based on the near infrared observations performed
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
We compute the cross-correlation between a sample of 14,000 radio-loud AGN (RLAGN) with redshifts between 0.4 and 0.8 selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and a reference sample of 1.2 million luminous red galaxies in the same redshift range. W
The clustering properties of local, S_{1.4 GHz} > 1 mJy, radio sources are investigated for a sample of 820 objects drawn from the joint use of the FIRST and 2dF Galaxy Redshift surveys. To this aim, we present 271 new bj < 19.45 spectroscopic counte