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AzTEC/ASTE 1.1-mm Survey of the AKARI Deep Field South: source catalogue and number counts

Authors :
Hatsukade, B.
Kohno, K.
Aretxaga, I.
Austermann, J. E.
Ezawa, H.
Hughes, D. H.
Ikarashi, S.
Iono, D.
Kawabe, R.
Khan, S.
Matsuo, H.
Matsuura, S.
Nakanishi, K.
Oshima, T.
Perera, T.
Scott, K. S.
Shirahata, M.
Takeuchi, T. T.
Tamura, Y.
Tanaka, K.
Tosaki, T.
Wilson, G. W.
Yun, M. S.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

We present results of a 1.1 mm deep survey of the AKARI Deep Field South (ADF-S) with AzTEC mounted on the Atacama Submillimetre Telescope Experiment (ASTE). We obtained a map of 0.25 sq. deg area with an rms noise level of 0.32-0.71 mJy. This is one of the deepest and widest maps thus far at millimetre and submillimetre wavelengths. We uncovered 198 sources with a significance of 3.5-15.6 sigma, providing the largest catalog of 1.1 mm sources in a contiguous region. Most of the sources are not detected in the far-infrared bands of the AKARI satellite, suggesting that they are mostly at z ~ 1.5 given the detection limits. We constructed differential and cumulative number counts in the ADF-S, the Subaru/XMM Newton Deep Field (SXDF), and the SSA 22 field surveyed by AzTEC/ASTE, which provide currently the tightest constraints on the faint end. The integration of the best-fit number counts in the ADF-S find that the contribution of 1.1 mm sources with fluxes >=1 mJy to the cosmic infrared background (CIB) at 1.1 mm is 12-16%, suggesting that the large fraction of the CIB originates from faint sources of which the number counts are not yet constrained. We estimate the cosmic star-formation rate density contributed by 1.1 mm sources with >=1 mJy using the best-fit number counts in the ADF-S and find that it is lower by about a factor of 5-10 compared to those derived from UV/optically-selected galaxies at z ~ 2-3. The fraction of stellar mass of the present-day universe produced by 1.1 mm sources with >=1 mJy at z >= 1 is ~20%, calculated by the time integration of the star-formation rate density. If we consider the recycled fraction of >0.4, which is the fraction of materials forming stars returned to the interstellar medium, the fraction of stellar mass produced by 1.1 mm sources decrease to <~10%.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1010.0585
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.17658.x