THE SPACE DENSITY OF LUMINOUS DUSTY STAR-FORMING GALAXIES AT z > 4: SCUBA-2 AND LABOCA IMAGING OF ULTRARED GALAXIES FROM HERSCHEL-ATLAS
2016
Until recently, only a handful of dusty, star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) were known at z > 4, most of them significantly
amplified by gravitational lensing. Here, we have increased the number of such DSFGs substantially,
selecting galaxies from the uniquely wide 250-, 350- and 500-µm Herschel-ATLAS imaging survey on the basis
of their extremely red far-infrared colors and faint 350- and 500-µm flux densities – ergo they are expected
to be largely unlensed, luminous, rare and very distant. The addition of ground-based continuum photometry at
longer wavelengths from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment
(APEX) allows us to identify the dust peak in their spectral energy distributions (SEDs), better constraining
their redshifts. We select the SED templates best able to determine photometric redshifts using a sample of 69
high-redshift, lensed DSFGs, then perform checks to assess the impact of the CMB on our technique, and to
quantify the systematic uncertainty associated with our photometric redshifts, σ = 0.14(1 + z), using a sample
of 25 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts, each consistent with our color selection. For Herschel-selected
ultrared galaxies with typical colors of S500/S250 ∼ 2.2 and S500/S350 ∼ 1.3 and flux densities, S500 ∼ 50 mJy,
we determine a median redshift, ˆzphot = 3.66, an interquartile redshift range, 3.30–4.27, with a median restframe
8–1000-µm luminosity, LˆIR, of 1.3 × 1013 L⊙. A third lie at z > 4, suggesting a space density, ρz>4,
of ≈ 6 × 10−7 Mpc−3
. Our sample contains the most luminous known star-forming galaxies, and the most
over-dense cluster of starbursting proto-ellipticals yet found.
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