The z=5 Quasar Luminosity Function from SDSS Stripe 82
Ian D. McGreer, Linhua Jiang, Xiaohui Fan, Gordon T. Richards, Michael, A. Strauss, Nicholas P. Ross, Martin White, Yue Shen, Donald P. Schneider,, Adam D. Myers, W. Niel Brandt, Colin DeGraf, Eilat Glikman, Jian Ge, Alina, Streblyanska

TL;DR
This paper measures the quasar luminosity function at redshift 5 using SDSS data, revealing a steep bright end slope, a strong evolution of the break luminosity, and indicating quasars contribute significantly to cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of the z=5 quasar luminosity function down to faint magnitudes, with a large, highly complete sample from SDSS Stripe 82 and new spectroscopic data.
Findings
Steep bright end slope (beta <~ -4) at z=5.
Strong evolution of the break luminosity with redshift.
Quasars contribute ~30% of ionizing photons at z=5.
Abstract
We present a measurement of the Type I quasar luminosity function at z=5 using a large sample of spectroscopically confirmed quasars selected from optical imaging data. We measure the bright end (M_1450<-26) with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data covering ~6000 deg^2, then extend to lower luminosities (M_1450<-24) with newly discovered, faint z~5 quasars selected from 235 deg^2 of deep, coadded imaging in the SDSS Stripe 82 region (the celestial equator in the Southern Galactic Cap). The faint sample includes 14 quasars with spectra obtained as ancillary science targets in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), and 59 quasars observed at the MMT and Magellan telescopes. We construct a well-defined sample of 4.7<z<5.1 quasars that is highly complete, with 73 spectroscopic identifications out of 92 candidates. Our color selection method is also highly efficient:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
