Back to Search Start Over

A Population of z>2 Far-Infrared Herschel-SPIRE selected Starbursts

Authors :
Casey, C. M.
Berta, S.
Béthermin, M.
Bock, J.
Bridge, C.
Burgarella, D.
Chapin, E.
Chapman, S. C.
Clements, D. L.
Conley, A.
Conselice, C. J.
Cooray, A.
Farrah, D.
Hatziminaoglou, E.
Ivison, R. J.
Floc'h, E. Le
Lutz, D.
Magdis, G.
Magnelli, B.
Oliver, S. J.
Page, M. J.
Pozzi, F.
Rigopoulou, D.
Riguccini, L.
Roseboom, I. G.
Sanders, D. B.
Scott, D.
Seymour, N.
Valtchanov, I.
Vieira, J. D.
Viero, M.
Wardlow, J.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

We present spectroscopic observations for a sample of 36 Herschel-SPIRE 250-500um selected galaxies (HSGs) at 2<z<5 from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Redshifts are confirmed as part of a large redshift survey of Herschel-SPIRE-selected sources covering ~0.93deg^2 in six extragalactic legacy fields. Observations were taken with the Keck I Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) and the Keck II DEep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph (DEIMOS). Precise astrometry, needed for spectroscopic follow-up, is determined by identification of counterparts at 24um or 1.4GHz using a cross-identification likelihood matching method. Individual source luminosities range from log(L_IR/Lsun)=12.5-13.6 (corresponding to star formation rates 500-9000Msun/yr, assuming a Salpeter IMF), constituting some of the most intrinsically luminous, distant infrared galaxies yet discovered. We present both individual and composite rest-frame ultraviolet spectra and infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs). The selection of these HSGs is reproducible and well characterized across large areas of sky in contrast to most z>2 HyLIRGs in the literature which are detected serendipitously or via tailored surveys searching only for high-z HyLIRGs; therefore, we can place lower limits on the contribution of HSGs to the cosmic star formation rate density at (7+-2)x10^(-3)Msun/yr h^3Mpc^(-3) at z~2.5, which is >10% of the estimated total star formation rate density (SFRD) of the Universe from optical surveys. The contribution at z~4 has a lower limit of 3x10^(-3)Msun/yr h^3 Mpc^(-3), ~>20% of the estimated total SFRD. This highlights the importance of extremely infrared-luminous galaxies with high star formation rates to the build-up of stellar mass, even at the earliest epochs.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures; ApJ accepted

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1210.4932
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/761/2/139