Two more, bright, z > 6 quasars from VST ATLAS and WISE
B. Chehade (1), A. C. Carnall (1,2), T. Shanks (1), C. Diener (3), M., Fumagalli (1,4), J.R. Findlay (5), N. Metcalfe (1), J. Hennawi (6), C., Leibler (7), D.N.A. Murphy (3), J.X. Prochaska (7), M.J. Irwin (3), E., Gonzalez-Solares (3) ((1) Centre for Extragalactic Astronomy

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of four new bright quasars at redshifts greater than 6 using an innovative colour selection method combining VST ATLAS and WISE data, expanding the known high-redshift quasar population.
Contribution
It introduces a new colour selection technique using WISE bands to efficiently identify bright z>6 quasars over a large sky area, and reports the discovery of six such quasars including previously known ones.
Findings
Discovered four new bright z>6 quasars with confirmed spectra.
Quasar space density aligns with previous SDSS results.
Estimated black hole masses range from 1 to 6 billion solar masses.
Abstract
Recently, Carnall et al. discovered two bright high redshift quasars using the combination of the VST ATLAS and WISE surveys. The technique involved using the 3-D colour plane i-z:z-W1:W1-W2 with the WISE W1 (3.4 micron) and W2 (4.5 micron) bands taking the place of the usual NIR J band to help decrease stellar dwarf contamination. Here we report on our continued search for 5.7<z<6.4 quasars over an ~2x larger area of ~3577 sq. deg. of the Southern Hemisphere. We have found two further z>6 quasars, VST-ATLAS J158.6938-14.4211 at z=6.07 and J332.8017-32.1036 at z=6.32 with magnitudes of z_AB=19.4 and 19.7 mag respectively. J158.6938-14.4211 was confirmed by Keck LRIS observations and J332.8017-32.1036 was confirmed by ESO NTT EFOSC-2 observations. Here we present VLT X-shooter Visible and NIR spectra for the four ATLAS quasars. We have further independently rediscovered two z>5.7 quasars…
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