Unveiling Far-infrared Counterparts of Bright Submillimeter Galaxies Using PACS Imaging

Dannerbauer, H.; Daddi, E.; Morrison, G. E.; Altieri, B.; Andreani, P.; Aussel, H.; Berta, S.; Bongiovanni, A.; Cava, A.; Cepa, J.; Cimatti, A.; Dominguez, H.; Elbaz, D.; Förster Schreiber, N.; Genzel, R.; Gruppioni, C.; Horeau, B.; Hwang, H. S.; Le Floc'h, E.; Le Pennec, J.; Lutz, D.; Magdis, G.; Magnelli, B.; Maiolino, R.; Nordon, R.; Pérez-García, A. M.; Poglitsch, A.; Popesso, P.; Pozzi, F.; Riguccini, L.; Rodighiero, G.; Saintonge, A.; Santini, P.; Sanchez-Portal, M.; Shao, L.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L.; Valtchanov, I.
Bibliographical reference

The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 720, Issue 2, pp. L144-L148 (2010).

Advertised on:
9
2010
Number of authors
38
IAC number of authors
4
Citations
16
Refereed citations
14
Description
We present a search for Herschel-PACS counterparts of dust-obscured, high-redshift objects previously selected at submillimeter and millimeter wavelengths in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey North field. We detect 22 of 56 submillimeter galaxies (SMGs, 39%) with a signal-to-noise ratio of >=3 at 100 μm down to 3.0 mJy, and/or at 160 μm down to 5.7 mJy. The fraction of SMGs seen at 160 μm is higher than that at 100 μm. About 50% of radio-identified SMGs are associated with PACS sources. We find a trend between the SCUBA/PACS flux ratio and redshift, suggesting that these flux ratios could be used as a coarse redshift indicator. PACS-undetected submillimeter/millimeter selected sources tend to lie at higher redshifts than the PACS-detected ones. A total of 12 sources (21% of our SMG sample) remain unidentified and the fact that they are blank fields at Herschel-PACS and the Very Large Array 20 cm wavelength may imply higher redshifts for them than for the average SMG population (e.g., z>3-4). The Herschel-PACS imaging of these dust-obscured starbursts at high redshifts suggests that their far-infrared spectral energy distributions have significantly different shapes than template libraries of local infrared galaxies.