We investigated the presence of galaxy overdensities around four z∼6
QSOs, namely SDSS J1030+0524 (z = 6.28), SDSS J1148+5251 (z = 6.41), SDSS
J1048+4637 (z = 6.20) and SDSS J1411+1217 (z = 5.95), through deep r-, i-
and z- band imaging obtained with the wide-field (∼23′×25′) Large
Binocular Camera (LBC) at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). We adopted
color-color selections within the i−z vs r−z plane to identify samples of
i-band dropouts at the QSO redshift and measure their relative abundance and
spatial distribution in the four LBC fields, each covering ∼8×8
physical Mpc at z∼6. The same selection criteria were then applied to
z-band selected sources in the ∼1 deg2 Subaru-XMM Newton Deep Survey
to derive the expected number of dropouts over a blank LBC-sized field
(∼0.14 deg2). The four observed QSO fields host a number of candidates
larger than what is expected in a blank field. By defining as i-band dropouts
objects with zAB1.4 and undetected in the r-band, we found
16, 10, 9, 12 dropouts in SDSS J1030+0524, SDSS J1148+5251, SDSS J1048+4637,
and SDSS J1411+1217, respectively, whereas only 4.3 such objects are expected
over a 0.14 deg2 blank field. This corresponds to overdensity significances
of 3.3, 1.9, 1.7, 2.5σ, respectively. By considering the total number of
dropouts in the four LBC fields and comparing it with what is expected in four
blank fields of 0.14 deg2 each, we find that high-z QSOs reside in overdense
environments at the 3.7σ level. This is the first direct and unambiguous
measurement of the large scale structures around z∼6 QSOs. [shortened]Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&