Friday, October 26, 2012

1210.6697 (Graeme E. Addison et al.)

Constraining thermal dust emission in distant galaxies with number counts and angular power spectra    [PDF]

Graeme E. Addison, Joanna Dunkley, J. Richard Bond
We perform a joint fit to differential number counts from Spitzer's MIPS and Herschel's SPIRE instruments, and angular power spectra of cosmic infrared background (CIB) anisotropies from SPIRE, Planck, the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, and the South Pole Telescope, which together span 220 < \nu / GHz < 4300 (70 < \lambda / \mu m < 1400). We simultaneously constrain the dust luminosity function, thermal dust spectral energy distribution (SED) and clustering properties of CIB sources, and the evolution of these quantities over cosmic time. We find that the data strongly require redshift evolution in the thermal dust SED. In our adopted parametrization, this evolution takes the form of an increase in graybody dust temperature at high redshift, but it may also be related to a temperature - dust luminosity correlation or evolution in dust opacity. The counts and spectra together constrain the evolution of the thermal dust luminosity function up to z ~ 2.5-3, complementing approaches relying on rest-frame mid-infrared observations of the rarest bright objects. We are able to fit the power spectra without requiring a complex halo model approach, and show that neglecting scale-dependent halo bias may be impairing analyses that do use this framework. Our model has considerable predictive power and can be used to calculate any one- or two-point statistic of the CIB over a wide range of frequency and angular scale.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1210.6697

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