The FMOS-COSMOS survey of star-forming galaxies at z~1.6 III. Survey design, performance, and sample characteristics
J. D. Silverman, D. Kashino, D. Sanders, J. Kartaltepe, N. Arimoto, A., Renzini, G. Rodighiero, E. Daddi, J. Zahid, T. Nagao, L. J. Kewley, S. J., Lilly, N. Sugiyama, I. Baronchelli, P. Capak, C. M. Carollo, J. Chu, G., Hasinger, O. Ilbert, S. Juneau, M. Kajisawa

TL;DR
This paper details the design, execution, and initial results of the FMOS-COSMOS spectroscopic survey targeting star-forming galaxies at redshift ~1.6, focusing on Halpha emission to study galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a large, high-resolution near-infrared spectroscopic survey of galaxies at z~1.6, demonstrating the instrument's performance and providing valuable data for galaxy evolution studies.
Findings
460 redshifts measured from 1153 spectra
Assessment of FMOS instrument performance and biases
Catalogs and spectra made available to the community
Abstract
We present a spectroscopic survey of galaxies in the COSMOS field using the Fiber Multi-Object Spectrograph (FMOS), a near-infrared instrument on the Subaru Telescope. Our survey is specifically designed to detect the Halpha emission line that falls within the H-band (1.6-1.8 um) spectroscopic window from star-forming galaxies with 1.4 < z < 1.7 and M_stellar>~10^10 Msolar. With the high multiplex capability of FMOS, it is now feasible to construct samples of over one thousand galaxies having spectroscopic redshifts at epochs that were previously challenging. The high-resolution mode (R~2600) effectively separates Halpha and [NII]6585 thus enabling studies of the gas-phase metallicity and photoionization state of the interstellar medium. The primary aim of our program is to establish how star formation depends on stellar mass and environment, both recognized as drivers of galaxy…
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