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  5. Random Forests as a Viable Method to Select and Discover High-redshift Quasars
 

Random Forests as a Viable Method to Select and Discover High-redshift Quasars

Journal
THE ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL  
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Wenzl, Lukas
•
Schindler, Jan Torge
•
Fan, Xiaohui
•
Andika, Irham Taufik
•
Bañados, Eduardo
•
DECARLI, ROBERTO  
•
Jahnke, Knud
•
Mazzucchelli, Chiara
•
Onoue, Masafusa
•
Venemans, Bram P.
•
Walter, Fabian
•
Yang, Jinyi
DOI
10.3847/1538-3881/ac0254
Abstract
We present a method of selecting quasars up to redshift ≈6 with random forests, a supervised machine-learning method, applied to Pan-STARRS1 and WISE data. We find that, thanks to the increasing set of known quasars, we can assemble a training set that enables supervised machine-learning algorithms to become a competitive alternative to other methods up to this redshift. We present a candidate set for the redshift range 4.8-6.3, which includes the region around z = 5.5 where selecting quasars is difficult due to their photometric similarity to red and brown dwarfs. We demonstrate that, under our survey restrictions, we can reach a high completeness (66% 7% below redshift 5.6/{83}_{-9}^{+6} \% above redshift 5.6) while maintaining a high selection efficiency ({78}_{-8}^{+10} \%/{94}_{-8}^{+5} \%). Our selection efficiency is estimated via a novel method based on the different distributions of quasars and contaminants on the sky. The final catalog of 515 candidates includes 225 known quasars. We predict the candidate catalog to contain additional {148}_{-33}^{+41} new quasars below redshift 5.6 and {45}_{-8}^{+5} above, and we make the catalog publicly available. Spectroscopic follow-up observations of 37 candidates led us to discover 20 new high redshift quasars (18 at 4.6 ≤ z ≤ 5.5, 2 z ∼ 5.7). These observations are consistent with our predictions on efficiency. We argue that random forests can lead to higher completeness because our candidate set contains a number of objects that would be rejected by common color cuts, including one of the newly discovered redshift 5.7 quasars.
Volume
162
Issue
2
Start page
72
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/31704
Url
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ac0254
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85112364448
Issn Identifier
0004-6256
Rights
open.access
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