论文标题
LSST II的光度红移:近红外和近粉状光度法的影响
Photometric Redshifts with the LSST II: The Impact of Near-Infrared and Near-Ultraviolet Photometry
论文作者
论文摘要
准确的光度红移(照片 - $ z $)估计值对于Vera C. Rubin C. Rubin天文台遗产的时空和时间(LSST)的宇宙学目标至关重要。在这项工作中,我们使用模拟的光度法用于模拟星系目录来探索LSST照片-Y $ Z $估计方法如何通过添加近红外(NIR)和/或紫外线(UV)光度法来改善Euclid,wfirst和/或Castor Space望远镜的光度法。通常,我们发现更深的光学光度法可以减少照片的标准偏差-Z $估计比添加NIR或UV过滤器的估计值更多,但是额外的过滤器是显着降低具有灾难性较低或过度估计的照片的唯一方法。对于Euclid,我们发现$ {JH} $5σ$光度检测可以通过$ {\ sim} 20 \%$($ {$ {\ sim} 10 \%$)和$ sim $ { ($ {\ sim} 25 \%$)。对于Wfirst,我们展示了如何添加深$ {yjhk} $光度法可以将标准偏差减少$ {\ gtrsim} 50 \%$在$ z> 1.5 $中,并大大将异常比分的分数大幅减少至$ {\ sim} 2 \%$ $ $ $ $。对于Castor,我们发现其$ {UV} $和$ u $ -band光度法的添加可以将标准偏差减少$ {\ sim} 30 \%$,而$ {\ sim} 50 \%$的离群分数则以$ z <0.5 $。我们还评估了与NIR和紫外线调查重叠的天空区域内的照片 - $ z $结果,以及使用调查的小区域深领域建造的光谱训练集时。
Accurate photometric redshift (photo-$z$) estimates are essential to the cosmological science goals of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). In this work we use simulated photometry for mock galaxy catalogs to explore how LSST photo-$z$ estimates can be improved by the addition of near-infrared (NIR) and/or ultraviolet (UV) photometry from the Euclid, WFIRST, and/or CASTOR space telescopes. Generally, we find that deeper optical photometry can reduce the standard deviation of the photo-$z$ estimates more than adding NIR or UV filters, but that additional filters are the only way to significantly lower the fraction of galaxies with catastrophically under- or over-estimated photo-$z$. For Euclid, we find that the addition of ${JH}$ $5σ$ photometric detections can reduce the standard deviation for galaxies with $z>1$ ($z>0.3$) by ${\sim}20\%$ (${\sim}10\%$), and the fraction of outliers by ${\sim}40\%$ (${\sim}25\%$). For WFIRST, we show how the addition of deep ${YJHK}$ photometry could reduce the standard deviation by ${\gtrsim}50\%$ at $z>1.5$ and drastically reduce the fraction of outliers to just ${\sim}2\%$ overall. For CASTOR, we find that the addition of its ${UV}$ and $u$-band photometry could reduce the standard deviation by ${\sim}30\%$ and the fraction of outliers by ${\sim}50\%$ for galaxies with $z<0.5$. We also evaluate the photo-$z$ results within sky areas that overlap with both the NIR and UV surveys, and when spectroscopic training sets built from the surveys' small-area deep fields are used.