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Red, redder, reddest: SCUBA-2 imaging of colour-selected Herschel sources
Author(s)
S Duivenvoorden
S Oliver
J M Scudder
J Greenslade
D A Riechers
S M Wilkins
V Buat
S C Chapman
D L Clements
A Cooray
K E K Coppin
H Dannerbauer
G De Zotti
J S Dunlop
S A Eales
D Farrah
J E Geach
W S Holland
P D Hurley
R J Ivison
L Marchetti
G Petitpas
M T Sargent
D Scott
M Symeonidis
M Vaccari
J D Vieira
L Wang
J Wardlow
M Zemcov
Abstract
High-redshift, luminous, dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) constrain the extremity of galaxy formation theories. The most extreme are discovered through follow-up on candidates in large area surveys. Here, we present extensive 850 μm SCUBA-2 follow-up observations of 188 red DSFG candidates from the Herschel Multitiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) LargeMode Survey, covering 274 deg2.We detected 87 per cent with a signal-to-noise ratio > 3 at 850 μm. We introduce a new method for incorporating the confusion noise in our spectral energy distribution fitting by sampling correlated flux density fluctuations from a confusion limited map. The new 850 μm data provide a better constraint on the photometric redshifts of the candidates, with photometric redshift errors decreasing from σz/(1 + z) ≈ 0.21 to 0.15. Comparison spectroscopic redshifts also found little bias (〈(z-zspec)/(1+zspec)〉 = 0.08). The mean photometric redshift is found to be 3.6 with a dispersion of 0.4 and we identify 21 DSFGs with a high probability of lying at z > 4. After simulating our selection effects we find number counts are consistent with phenomenological galaxy evolution models. There is a statistically significant excess of WISE-1 and SDSS sources near our red galaxies, giving a strong indication that lensing may explain some of the apparently extreme objects. Nevertheless, our sample includes examples of galaxies with the highest star formation rates in the Universe (≫103 M⊙ yr-1).
Part Of
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Journal or Serie
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Issue
1
Volume
477
Start Page
1099
End Page
1119
ISSN
00358711
Date Issued
2018
Open Access
Yes
DOI
10.1093/mnras/sty691
School
Publisher
Oxford University Press
File(s)