Abstract About 70 luminous quasars discovered atz> 6.5 are strongly biased toward the bright end, thus not providing a comprehensive view of quasar abundance beyond the cosmic dawn. We present the predicted results of the Roman/Rubin high-redshift quasar survey, yielding 3 times more, 2–4 mag deeper quasar samples, probing high-redshift quasars across a broad range of luminosities, especially faint quasars atLbol∼ 1010L⊙orM1450∼ −22, which are currently poorly explored. We include high-zquasars, galactic dwarfs, and low-zcompact galaxies with similar colors as quasar candidates. We create mock catalogs based on population models to evaluate selection completeness and efficiency. We utilize the classical color dropout method in thezandYbands to select primary quasar candidates, followed up with the Bayesian selection method to identify quasars. We show that overall selection completeness >80% and efficiency ∼10% at 6.5 <z< 9, with 180 quasars atz> 6.5, 20 atz> 7.5, and 2 atz> 8.5. The quasar yields depend sensitively on the assumed quasar luminosity shape and redshift evolution. Brown dwarf rejection through proper motion up to 50% can be made for stars brighter than 25 mag, low-zgalaxies dominate at fainter magnitude. Our results show that Roman/Rubin are able to discover a statistical sample of the earliest and faintest quasars in the Universe. The new valuable data sets are worth follow-up studies with JWST and Extremely Large Telescopes to determine the quasar luminosity function faint end slope and constraint the supermassive black holes growth in the early Universe.
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The bluetides mock image catalogue: simulated observations of high-redshift galaxies and predictions for JWST imaging surveys
ABSTRACT We present a mock image catalogue of ∼100 000 MUV ≃ −22.5 to −19.6 mag galaxies at z = 7–12 from the bluetides cosmological simulation. We create mock images of each galaxy with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), Hubble, Roman, and Euclid Space Telescopes, as well as Subaru, and VISTA, with a range of near- and mid-infrared filters. We perform photometry on the mock images to estimate the success of these instruments for detecting high-z galaxies. We predict that JWST will have unprecedented power in detecting high-z galaxies, with a 95 per cent completeness limit at least 2.5 mag fainter than VISTA and Subaru, 1.1 mag fainter than Hubble, and 0.9 mag fainter than Roman, for the same wavelength and exposure time. Focusing on JWST, we consider a range of exposure times and filters, and find that the NIRCam F356W and F277W filters will detect the faintest galaxies, with 95 per cent completeness at m ≃ 27.4 mag in 10-ks exposures. We also predict the number of high-z galaxies that will be discovered by upcoming JWST imaging surveys. We predict that the COSMOS-Web survey will detect ∼1000 M1500 Å < −20.1 mag galaxies at 6.5 < z < 7.5, by virtue of its large survey area. JADES-Medium will detect almost $$100{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$$ of M1500 Å ≲ −20 mag galaxies at z < 8.5 due to its significant depth, however, with its smaller survey area it will detect only ∼100 of these galaxies at 6.5 < z < 7.5. Cosmic variance results in a large range in the number of predicted galaxies each survey will detect, which is more evident in smaller surveys such as CEERS and the PEARLS NEP and GOODS-S fields.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2020295
- PAR ID:
- 10370599
- Publisher / Repository:
- Oxford University Press
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Volume:
- 516
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 0035-8711
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- p. 1047-1061
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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