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The Discovery of Three Newz > 5 Quasars in the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey

Authors :
Richard J. Cool
Richard Elston
Michael J. I. Brown
Peter R. Eisenhardt
Kate Brand
Buell T. Jannuzi
B. T. Soifer
Daniel J. Eisenstein
George H. Rieke
Richard F. Green
Daniel Stern
Christopher S. Kochanek
Marcia J. Rieke
Anthony H. Gonzalez
Hyron Spinrad
Eric McKenzie
Xiaohui Fan
Arjun Dey
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 132:823-830
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2006.

Abstract

We present the discovery of three z>5 quasars in the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey (AGES) spectroscopic observations of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS) Bootes Field. These quasars were selected as part of a larger Spitzer mid-infrared quasar sample with no selection based on optical colors. The highest redshift object, NDWFS J142516.3+325409, z=5.85, is the lowest-luminosity z>5.8 quasar currently known. We compare mid-infrared techniques for identifying z>5 quasars to more traditional optical techniques and show that mid-infrared colors allow for selection of high-redshift quasars even at redshifts where quasars lie near the optical stellar locus and at z>7 where optical selection is impossible. Using the superb multi-wavelength coverage available in the NDWFS Bootes field, we construct the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of high-redshift quasars from observed Bw-band to 24 microns (rest-frame 600 Angstroms - 3.7 microns). We show that the three high-redshift quasars have quite similar SEDs, and the rest-frame composite SED of low-redshift quasars from the literature shows little evolution compared to our high-redshift objects. We compare the number of z>5 quasars we have discovered to the expected number from published quasar luminosity functions. While analyses of the quasar luminosity function are tenuous based on only three objects, we find that a relatively steep luminosity function with Psi L^(-3.2) provides the best agreement with the number of high-redshift quasars discovered in our survey.<br />Comment: 9 page, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in AJ

Details

ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
132
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c87eb1c859d34073768856e298d4462f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/505535