A Census of Star-Forming Galaxies at z = 1-3 in the Subaru Deep Field
Chun Ly (1, 2, and 6), Matthew A. Malkan (2), Masao Hayashi (3),, Kentaro Motohara (3), Nobunari Kashikawa (3, 4), Kazuhiro Shimasaku (3),, Tohru Nagao (4), and Celestine Grady (5) ((1) STScI, (2) UCLA, (3) U. Tokyo,, Japan (4) NAOJ, (5) UC, Davis, (6) Giacconi Fellow)

TL;DR
This study combines multiple color selection methods to create a comprehensive census of star-forming galaxies at redshifts 1-3 in the Subaru Deep Field, revealing key properties and contributions to cosmic star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that combining UV and near-infrared color selection techniques captures about 90% of z=1-3 star-forming galaxies, providing a more complete understanding of galaxy populations.
Findings
Each method finds 60-80% of the census at its peak redshift.
75-96% of galaxies are shared between different selection techniques.
Total cosmic SFR density is 0.18 ± 0.03 M_sun yr^{-1} Mpc^{-3}.
Abstract
Several UV and near-infrared color selection methods have identified galaxies at z = 1-3. Since each method suffers from selection biases, we have applied three leading techniques (Lyman break, BX/BM, and BzK selection) simultaneously in the Subaru Deep Field. This field has reliable ({\Delta}z/(1 + z) = 0.02--0.09) photometric redshifts for ~53,000 galaxies from 20 bands (1500{\AA}--2.2{\mu}m). The BzK, LBG, and BX/BM samples suffer contamination from z<1 interlopers of 6%, 8%, and 20%, respectively. Around the redshifts where it is most sensitive (z~1.9 for star-forming BzK, z~1.8 for z~2 LBGs, z~1.6 for BM, and z~2.3 for BX), each technique finds 60-80% of the census of the three methods. In addition, each of the color techniques shares 75-96% of its galaxies with another method, which is consistent with previous studies that adopt identical criteria on magnitudes and colors.…
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