High-Redshift QSOs in the SWIRE Survey and the z~3 QSO Luminosity Function
Brian Siana (1), Maria del Carmen Polletta (2), Harding E. Smith (2),, Carol J. Lonsdale (3), Eduardo Gonzalez-Solares (4), Duncan Farrah (5), Tom, S. R. Babbedge (6), Michael Rowan-Robinson (6), Jason Surace (1), David Shupe, (1), Fan Fang (1), Alberto Franceschini (7)

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes high-redshift QSOs using optical/IR photometry, extending the QSO luminosity function to fainter magnitudes and assessing their role in cosmic reionization at z~3.
Contribution
It presents a reliable photometric selection method for z~3 QSOs, extends the luminosity function to fainter magnitudes, and provides new insights into their contribution to HI photoionization.
Findings
Achieved 80-90% completeness in z~3 QSO selection.
Extended the QSO luminosity function two magnitudes fainter than SDSS.
Estimated QSOs contribute about half of the HI photoionization rate at z~3.
Abstract
We use a simple optical/infrared (IR) photometric selection of high-redshift QSOs that identifies a Lyman Break in the optical photometry and requires a red IR color to distinguish QSOs from common interlopers. The search yields 100 z~3 (U-dropout) QSO candidates with 19<r'<22 over 11.7 deg^2 in the ELAIS-N1 (EN1) and ELAIS-N2 (EN2) fields of the Spitzer Wide-area Infrared Extragalactic (SWIRE) Legacy Survey. The z~3 selection is reliable, with spectroscopic follow-up of 10 candidates confirming they are all QSOs at 2.83<z<3.44. We find that our z~4$ (g'-dropout) sample suffers from both unreliability and incompleteness but present 7 previously unidentified QSOs at 3.50<z<3.89. Detailed simulations show our z~3 completeness to be ~80-90% from 3.0<z<3.5, significantly better than the ~30-80% completeness of the SDSS at these redshifts. The resulting luminosity function extends two…
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