HST Grism-derived Forecasts for Future Galaxy Redshift Surveys
Micaela B. Bagley (1, 2), Claudia Scarlata (2), Vihang Mehta (2),, Harry Teplitz (3), Ivano Baronchelli (4, 3), Daniel J. Eisenstein (5),, Lucia Pozzetti (6), Andrea Cimatti (7, 8), Michael Rutkowski (9), Yun Wang, (3), Alexander Merson (10, 3) ((1) University of Texas at Austin

TL;DR
This paper uses existing datasets to forecast the number and properties of emission-line galaxies for future Euclid and Roman redshift surveys, addressing selection effects and redshift misidentification issues.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of expected galaxy counts, properties, and contamination rates for upcoming large-scale galaxy redshift surveys using Halpha and [OIII] emission lines.
Findings
Detected ~1091 Halpha+[NII] emitters at 0.9-1.6 z
Identified ~162 [OIII] emitters at 1.5-2.3 z
Estimated redshift misidentification rates of 14-20%
Abstract
The mutually complementary Euclid and Roman galaxy redshift surveys will use Halpha- and [OIII]-selected emission line galaxies as tracers of the large scale structure at (Halpha) and ([OIII]). It is essential to have a reliable and sufficiently precise knowledge of the expected numbers of Halpha-emitting galaxies in the survey volume in order to optimize these redshift surveys for the study of dark energy. Additionally, these future samples of emission-line galaxies will, like all slitless spectroscopy surveys, be affected by a complex selection function that depends on galaxy size and luminosity, line equivalent width, and redshift errors arising from the misidentification of single emission-line galaxies. Focusing on the specifics of the Euclid survey, we combine two slitless spectroscopic WFC3-IR datasets -- 3D-HST+AGHAST…
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