The Subaru high-z quasar survey: discovery of faint z~6 quasars
Nobunari Kashikawa, Yoshifumi Ishizaki, Chris J. Willott, Masafusa, Onoue, Myungshin Im, Hisanori Furusawa, Jun Toshikawa, Shogo Ishikawa, Yuu, Niino, Kazuhiro Shimasaku, Masami Ouchi, Pascale Hibon

TL;DR
This study discovers extremely faint quasars at z~6 using Subaru's wide-field imaging, identifies their luminosity function, and assesses their role in cosmic reionization, revealing a steeper faint-end slope but still insufficient ionizing photons.
Contribution
First detection of faint z~6 quasars with Subaru, and a revised quasar luminosity function indicating a steeper faint-end slope at high redshift.
Findings
Identified one or two faint quasars at z~6.
Derived a steeper faint-end slope of the luminosity function.
Faint quasars contribute only partially to reionization photon budget.
Abstract
We present the discovery of one or two extremely faint z~6 quasars in 6.5 deg^2 utilizing a unique capability of the wide-field imaging of the Subaru/Suprime-Cam. The quasar selection was made in (i'-z_B) and (z_B-z_R) colors, where z_B and z_R are bandpasses with central wavelengths of 8842A and 9841A, respectively. The color selection can effectively isolate quasars at z~6 from M/L/T dwarfs without the J-band photometry down to z_R<24.0, which is 3.5 mag. deeper than SDSS. We have selected 17 promising quasar candidates. The follow-up spectroscopy for seven targets identified one apparent quasar at z=6.156 with M_1450=-23.10. We also identified one possible quasar at z=6.041 with a faint continuum of M_1450=-22.58 and a narrow Lyman-alpha emission with HWHM=427 km/s, which cannot be distinguished from Lyman-alpha emitters. We derive the quasar luminosity function at z~6 by combining…
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