Authors
Mark J Devlin, Peter AR Ade, Itziar Aretxaga, James J Bock, Edward L Chapin, Matthew Griffin, Joshua O Gundersen, Mark Halpern, Peter C Hargrave, David H Hughes, Jeff Klein, Gaelen Marsden, Peter G Martin, Philip Mauskopf, Lorenzo Moncelsi, Calvin B Netterfield, Henry Ngo, Luca Olmi, Enzo Pascale, Guillaume Patanchon, Marie Rex, Douglas Scott, Christopher Semisch, Nicholas Thomas, Matthew DP Truch, Carole Tucker, Gregory S Tucker, Marco P Viero, Donald V Wiebe
Publication date
2009/4/9
Journal
Nature
Volume
458
Issue
7239
Pages
737-739
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Submillimetre surveys during the past decade have discovered a population of luminous, high-redshift, dusty starburst galaxies,,,,,,,. In the redshift range 1 ≤ z ≤ 4, these massive submillimetre galaxies go through a phase characterized by optically obscured star formation at rates several hundred times that in the local Universe. Half of the starlight from this highly energetic process is absorbed and thermally re-radiated by clouds of dust at temperatures near 30 K with spectral energy distributions peaking at 100 μm in the rest frame. At 1 ≤ z ≤ 4, the peak is redshifted to wavelengths between 200 and 500 μm. The cumulative effect of these galaxies is to yield extragalactic optical and far-infrared backgrounds with approximately equal energy densities. Since the initial detection of the far-infrared background (FIRB), higher-resolution experiments have sought to decompose this integrated radiation into the …
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