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The SCUBA HAlf Degree Extragalactic Survey - III. Identification of radio and mid-infrared counterparts to submillimetre galaxies

Authors :
Jamie Stevens
E. Egami
Andrew Blain
Angela M. J. Mortier
Scott Chapman
Michael Rowan-Robinson
David H. Hughes
S. J. Oliver
A. Pope
David L. Clements
E. Ibar
T. Jenness
Jessica Jones
Marc S. Seigar
Ian Smail
Itziar Aretxaga
Chris Simpson
A. D. Biggs
Tom Babbedge
John A. Peacock
Mark Halpern
E. van Kampen
K. Coppin
Jeff Wagg
P. G. Pérez-González
Matt J. Jarvis
Steve Rawlings
R. S. Savage
James Dunlop
C. Papovich
Duncan Farrah
Thomas R. Greve
Douglas Scott
Mattia Vaccari
Chris J. Willott
Steve Serjeant
George Rieke
Rob Ivison
Source :
E-Prints Complutense: Archivo Institucional de la UCM, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, E-Prints Complutense. Archivo Institucional de la UCM, instname
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Determining an accurate position for a submillimetre (submm) galaxy (SMG) is the crucial step that enables us to move from the basic properties of an SMG sample - source counts and 2D clustering - to an assessment of their detailed, multiwavelength properties, their contribution to the history of cosmic star formation and their links with present-day galaxy populations. In this paper, we identify robust radio and/or infrared (IR) counterparts, and hence accurate positions, for over two-thirds of the SCUBA HAlf-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) Source Catalogue, presenting optical, 24-μm and radio images of each SMG. Observed trends in identification rate have given no strong rationale for pruning the sample. Uncertainties in submm position are found to be consistent with theoretical expectations, with no evidence for significant additional sources of error. Employing the submm/radio redshift indicator, via a parametrization appropriate for radio-identified SMGs with spectroscopic redshifts, yields a median redshift of 2.8 for the radio-identified subset of SHADES, somewhat higher than the median spectroscopic redshift. We present a diagnostic colour-colour plot, exploiting Spitzer photometry, in which we identify regions commensurate with SMGs at very high redshift. Finally, we find that significantly more SMGs have multiple robust counterparts than would be expected by chance, indicative of physical associations. These multiple systems are most common amongst the brightest SMGs and are typically separated by 2-6 arcsec, similar to 15-20/sin i kpc at z~ 2, consistent with early bursts seen in merger simulations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
E-Prints Complutense: Archivo Institucional de la UCM, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, E-Prints Complutense. Archivo Institucional de la UCM, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ebbf01d5ba8cc94a4316e7bd1f76acd1