Discovery of Lyman Break Galaxies at z~7 from the ZFOURGE Survey
V. Tilvi (Texas A&M), C. Papovich (Texas A&M), K.-V. H. Tran (Texas, A&M), I. Labbe (Leiden University), L. R. Spitler (Swinburne University), C., M. S. Straatman (Leiden University), S. E. Persson (Carnegie Observatories),, A. Monson (Carnegie Observatories)

TL;DR
This study identifies three candidate z~7 Lyman-break galaxies using the FourStar survey, demonstrating the effectiveness of medium-band filters in distinguishing high-redshift galaxies from stars and analyzing their properties.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method using medium-band filters for accurate redshift determination of z~7 galaxies and assesses their properties, improving upon broad-band photometry limitations.
Findings
Medium-band filters improve redshift accuracy for z~7 galaxies.
The UV luminosity function at z~7 aligns with previous studies.
Star-formation rates increase with stellar mass in bright LBGs.
Abstract
Star-forming galaxies at redshifts z>6 are likely responsible for the reionization of the universe, and it is important to study the nature of these galaxies. We present three candidates for z~7 Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) from a 155 arcmin^2 area in the CANDELS/COSMOS field imaged by the deep FourStar Galaxy Evolution (zFourGE) survey. The FourStar medium-band filters provide the equivalent of R~10 spectroscopy, which cleanly distinguishes between z~7 LBGs and brown dwarf stars. The distinction between stars and galaxies based on an object's angular size can become unreliable even when using HST imaging; there exists at least one very compact z~7 candidate (FWHM~0.5-1 kpc) that is indistinguishable from a point source. The medium-band filters provide narrower redshift distributions compared with broad-band-derived redshifts. The UV luminosity function derived using the three z~7…
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