Target Selection and Validation of DESI Luminous Red Galaxies
astro-ph.CO
/ Authors
Rongpu Zhou, Biprateep Dey, Jeffrey A. Newman, Daniel J. Eisenstein, K. Dawson, S. Bailey, A. Berti, J. Guy, Ting-Wen Lan, H. Zou
and 39 more authors
J. Aguilar, S. Ahlen, Shadab Alam, D. Brooks, A. de la Macorra, A. Dey, G. Dhungana, K. Fanning, A. Font-Ribera, S. Gontcho A Gontcho, K. Honscheid, Mustapha Ishak, T. Kisner, A. Kovács, A. Kremin, M. Landriau, Michael E. Levi, C. Magneville, Marc Manera, P. Martini, Aaron M. Meisner, R. Miquel, J. Moustakas, Adam D. Myers
/ Abstract
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is carrying out a 5-year survey that aims to measure the redshifts of tens of millions of galaxies and quasars, including 8 million luminous red galaxies (LRGs) in the redshift range of $0.4<z<{\sim}\,1.0$. Here we present the selection of the DESI LRG sample and assess its spectroscopic performance using data from Survey Validation (SV) and the first 2 months of the Main Survey. The DESI LRG sample, selected using $g$, $r$, $z$, and $W1$ photometry from the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys, is highly robust against imaging systematics. The sample has a target density of 605 deg$^{-2}$ and a comoving number density of $5\times10^{-4}\ h^3\mathrm{Mpc}^{-3}$ in $0.4<z<0.8$; this is a significantly higher density than previous LRG surveys (such as SDSS, BOSS and eBOSS) while also extending to $z \sim 1$. After applying a bright star veto mask developed for the sample, $98.9\%$ of the observed LRG targets yield confident redshifts (with a catastrophic failure rate of $0.2\%$ in the confident redshifts), and only $0.5\%$ of the LRG targets are stellar contamination. The LRG redshift efficiency varies with source brightness and effective exposure time, and we present a simple model that accurately characterizes this dependence. In the appendices, we describe the extended LRG samples observed during SV.