Discovering bright quasars at intermediate redshifts based on the optical/near-IR colors
Xue-Bing Wu, Wenwen Zuo, Jinyi Yang, Qian Yang, Feige Wang (Peking, University)

TL;DR
This study develops and validates an optical/near-IR color-based method to efficiently identify intermediate-redshift quasars, significantly improving detection success and reducing star contamination compared to previous techniques.
Contribution
Introduces a robust Y-K/g-z color criterion combined with photometric redshift estimation for selecting z<4 quasars, validated with SDSS and UKIDSS data, and provides a catalog of high-redshift quasar candidates.
Findings
High success rate in identifying quasars at 2.2<z<3.5.
The Y-K/g-z criterion effectively distinguishes quasars from stars.
Photometric redshift estimation is significantly improved with 9-band data.
Abstract
Identifications of quasars at intermediate redshifts (2.2<z<3.5) are inefficient in most previous quasar surveys as their optical colors are similar to those of stars. The near-IR K-band excess technique has been suggested to overcome this difficulty. Our study also proposed to use optical/near-IR colors for selecting z<4 quasars. To this method, we selected 105 unidentified bright targets with i<18.5 from the quasar candidates of SDSS DR6 with both SDSS ugriz optical and UKIDSS YJHK near-IR photometric data, which satisfy our proposed Y-K/g-z criterion and have photometric redshifts between 2.2 and 3.5 estimated from the 9-band SDSS-UKIDSS data. 43 of them were observed with the 2.16m telescope of NAOC in 2012. 36 of them were identified as quasars at 2.1<z<3.4. High success rate of discovering these quasars in the SDSS spectroscopic surveyed area demonstrates the robustness of both…
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