BLAST: the far-infrared/radio correlation in distant galaxies

We investigate the correlation between far-infrared (FIR) and radio luminosities in distant galaxies, a lynchpin of modern astronomy. We use data from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST), Spitzer, the Large Apex BOlometer CamerA (LABOCA), the Very Large Array (VLA) and t...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2009-10
Hauptverfasser: Ivison, R J, Alexander, David M, Biggs, Andy D, Brandt, W N, Chapin, Edward L, Coppin, Kristen E K, Devlin, Mark J, Dickinson, Mark, Dunlop, James, Dye, Simon, Eales, Stephen A, Frayer, David T, Halpern, Mark, Hughes, David H, Ibar, Edo, Kovacs, A, Marsden, Gaelen, Moncelsi, L, Netterfield, Calvin B, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rafferty, D A, Rex, Marie, Schinnerer, Eva, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, C, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, A M, Truch, Matthew D P, Tucker, Gregory S, Viero, Marco P, Fabian, Walter, Weiss, Axel, Wiebe, Donald V, Xue, Y Q
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigate the correlation between far-infrared (FIR) and radio luminosities in distant galaxies, a lynchpin of modern astronomy. We use data from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST), Spitzer, the Large Apex BOlometer CamerA (LABOCA), the Very Large Array (VLA) and the Giant Metre-wave Radio Telescope (GMRT) in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDFS). For a catalogue of BLAST 250-micron-selected galaxies, we re-measure the 70--870-micron flux densities at the positions of their most likely 24-micron counterparts, which have a median [interquartile] redshift of 0.74 [0.25, 1.57]. From these, we determine the monochromatic flux density ratio, q_250 = log_10 (S_250micron / S_1400MHz), and the bolometric equivalent, q_IR. At z ~= 0.6, where our 250-micron filter probes rest-frame 160-micron emission, we find no evolution relative to q_160 for local galaxies. We also stack the FIR and submm images at the positions of 24-micron- and radio-selected galaxies. The difference between q_IR seen for 250-micron- and radio-selected galaxies suggests star formation provides most of the IR luminosity in ~< 100-uJy radio galaxies, but rather less for those in the mJy regime. For the 24-micron sample, the radio spectral index is constant across 0 < z < 3, but q_IR exhibits tentative evidence of a steady decline such that q_IR is proportional to (1+z)^(-0.15 +/- 0.03) - significant evolution, spanning the epoch of galaxy formation, with major implications for techniques that rely on the FIR/radio correlation. We compare with model predictions and speculate that we may be seeing the increase in radio activity that gives rise to the radio background.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.0910.1091