Introducing the FLAMINGOS-2 Split-K Medium Band Filters: The Impact on Photometric Selection of High-z Galaxies in the FENIKS-pilot survey

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 K-band at z>4. With single filter sampling of this spectral feature, degeneracies between SED models and redshift emerge. A potential solution to this comes from splitting the K-band into multiple filters. We use simulations to show an optimal solution is to add two medium-band filters, Kblue (λcen=2.06 μm, λ=0.25 μm) and Kred (λcen=2.31 μm, λ=0.27 μm), that are complementary to the existing Ks filter. We test the impact of the K-band filters with simulated catalogues comprised of galaxies with varying ages and signal-to-noise. The results suggest that the K-band filters do improve photometric redshift constraints on z>4 quiescent galaxies, increasing precision and reducing outliers by up to 90\%. We find that the impact from the K-band filters depends on the signal-to-noise, the redshift and the SED of the galaxy. The filters we designed were built and used to conduct a pilot of the FLAMINGOS-2 Extra-galactic Near-Infrared K-band Split (FENIKS) survey. While no new z>4 quiescent galaxies are identified in the limited area pilot, the Kblue and Kred filters indicate strong Balmer/4000 A breaks in existing candidates. Additionally we identify galaxies with strong nebular emission lines, for which the K-band filters increase photometric redshift precision and in some cases indicate extreme star-formation.

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