Introducing the FLAMINGOS-2 Split-K Medium Band Filters: The Impact on Photometric Selection of High-z Galaxies in the FENIKS-pilot survey
James Esdaile, Ivo Labbe, Karl Glazebrook, Jacqueline Antwi-Danso,, Casey Papovich, Edward Taylor, Z. Cemile Marsan, Adam Muzzin, Caroline M. S., Straatman, Danilo Marchesini, Ruben Diaz, Lee Spitler, Kim-Vy H. Tran,, Stephen Goodsell

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that adding two medium-band filters to the K-band improves photometric redshift accuracy for high-redshift galaxies, especially for quiescent ones, by reducing degeneracies and outliers in spectral energy distribution modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a novel set of medium-band filters for the K-band, optimized through simulations, and validates their effectiveness in improving photometric redshift estimates in a pilot survey.
Findings
K-band filters increase redshift precision for z>4 galaxies
Filters reduce outliers in photometric redshift estimates by up to 90%
Application to FENIKS pilot shows potential for identifying high-z galaxy features
Abstract
Deep near-infrared photometric surveys are efficient in identifying high-redshift galaxies, however they can be prone to systematic errors in photometric redshift. This is particularly salient when there is limited sampling of key spectral features of a galaxy's spectral energy distribution (SED), such as for quiescent galaxies where the expected age-sensitive Balmer/4000 A break enter the -band at . With single filter sampling of this spectral feature, degeneracies between SED models and redshift emerge. A potential solution to this comes from splitting the -band into multiple filters. We use simulations to show an optimal solution is to add two medium-band filters, (=2.06 m, =0.25 m) and (=2.31 m, =0.27 m), that are complementary to the existing…
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