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The 2dF–SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) Survey: the z < 2.1 quasar luminosity function from 5645 quasars to g= 21.85

Authors :
Richards, Gordon T.
Croom, Scott M.
Anderson, Scott F.
Bland-hawthorn, Joss
Boyle, Brian J.
De Propris, Roberto
Drinkwater, Michael J.
Fan, Xiaohui
Gunn, James E.
Ivezic, Zeljko
Jester, Sebastian
Loveday, Jon
Meiksin, Avery
Miller, Lance
Myers, Adam
Nichol, Bob
Outram, Phil J.
Pimbblet, Kevin A.
Roseboom, Isaac G.
Ross, Nic
Schneider, Donald P.
Shanks, Tom
Sharp, Robert G.
Stoughton, Chris
Strauss, Michael A.
Szalay, Alexander S.
Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
York, Donald G.
Source :
Richards, G T, Croom, S M, Anderson, S F, Bland-hawthorn, J, Boyle, B J, De Propris, R, Drinkwater, M J, Fan, X, Gunn, J E, Ivezic, Z, Jester, S, Loveday, J, Meiksin, A, Miller, L, Myers, A, Nichol, B, Outram, P J, Pimbblet, K A, Roseboom, I G, Ross, N, Schneider, D P, Shanks, T, Sharp, R G, Stoughton, C, Strauss, M A, Szalay, A S, Vanden Berk, D E & York, D G 2005, ' The 2dF–SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) Survey: the z < 2.1 quasar luminosity function from 5645 quasars to g= 21.85 ', Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 360, no. 3, pp. 839-852 . https://doi.org/10.1111/mnr.2005.360.issue-3
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

We have used the Two-Degree Field (2dF) instrument on the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) to obtain redshifts of a sample of z &lt; 3 and 18.0 &lt; g &lt; 21.85 quasars selected from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) imaging. These data are part of a larger joint programme between the SDSS and 2dF communities to obtain spectra of faint quasars and luminous red galaxies, namely the 2dF–SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) Survey. We describe the quasar selection algorithm and present the resulting number counts and luminosity function of 5645 quasars in 105.7 deg2. The bright-end number counts and luminosity functions agree well with determinations from the 2dF QSO Redshift Survey (2QZ) data to g∼ 20.2. However, at the faint end, the 2SLAQ number counts and luminosity functions are steeper (i.e. require more faint quasars) than the final 2QZ results from Croom et al., but are consistent with the preliminary 2QZ results from Boyle et al. Using the functional form adopted for the 2QZ analysis (a double power law with pure luminosity evolution characterized by a second-order polynomial in redshift), we find a faint-end slope of β=−1.78 &#177; 0.03 if we allow all of the parameters to vary, and β=−1.45 &#177; 0.03 if we allow only the faint-end slope and normalization to vary (holding all other parameters equal to the final 2QZ values). Over the magnitude range covered by the 2SLAQ survey, our maximum-likelihood fit to the data yields 32 per cent more quasars than the final 2QZ parametrization, but is not inconsistent with other g &gt; 21 deep surveys for quasars. The 2SLAQ data exhibit no well-defined ‘break’ in the number counts or luminosity function, but do clearly flatten with increasing magnitude. Finally, we find that the shape of the quasar luminosity function derived from 2SLAQ is in good agreement with that derived from Type I quasars found in hard X-ray surveys.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Richards, G T, Croom, S M, Anderson, S F, Bland-hawthorn, J, Boyle, B J, De Propris, R, Drinkwater, M J, Fan, X, Gunn, J E, Ivezic, Z, Jester, S, Loveday, J, Meiksin, A, Miller, L, Myers, A, Nichol, B, Outram, P J, Pimbblet, K A, Roseboom, I G, Ross, N, Schneider, D P, Shanks, T, Sharp, R G, Stoughton, C, Strauss, M A, Szalay, A S, Vanden Berk, D E &amp; York, D G 2005, &#39; The 2dF–SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) Survey: the z < 2.1 quasar luminosity function from 5645 quasars to g= 21.85 &#39;, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 360, no. 3, pp. 839-852 . https://doi.org/10.1111/mnr.2005.360.issue-3
Accession number :
edsair.od......3461..372b6dcdb065d0b2fabf4d263473ef84
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/mnr.2005.360.issue-3