posted on 2017-05-22, 13:37authored byL. Bisigello, K. I. Caputi, L. Colina, O. Le Fevre, H. U. Norgaard-Nielsen, P. G. Perez-Gonzalez, John Pye, P. van der Werf, O. Ilbert, N. Grogin, A. Koekemoer
The determination of galaxy redshifts in the James Webb Space Telescope’s (JWST) blank-field surveys will
mostly rely on photometric estimates, based on the data provided by JWST’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) at
0.6–5.0 μm and Mid Infrared Instrument (MIRI) at l > 5.0 mm . In this work we analyze the impact of choosing
different combinations of NIRCam and MIRI broadband filters (F070W to F770W), as well as having ancillary
data at l < 0.6 mm , on the derived photometric redshifts (zphot) of a total of 5921 real and simulated galaxies, with
known input redshifts z = 0–10. We found that observations at l < 0.6 mm are necessary to control the
contamination of high-z samples by low-z interlopers. Adding MIRI (F560W and F770W) photometry to the
NIRCam data mitigates the absence of ancillary observations at l < 0.6 mm and improves the redshift estimation.
At z = 7–10, accurate zphot can be obtained with the NIRCam broadbands alone when S N 10 , but the zphot
quality significantly degrades at SN 5 . Adding MIRI photometry with 1 mag brighter depth than the NIRCam
depth allows for a redshift recovery of 83%–99%, depending on spectral energy distribution type, and its effect is
particularly noteworthy for galaxies with nebular emission. The vast majority of NIRCam galaxies with
[F150W] = 29 AB mag at z = 7–10 will be detected with MIRI at [F560W, F770W] < 28 mag if these sources
are at least mildly evolved or have spectra with emission lines boosting the mid-infrared fluxes.