Bibcode
Marchetti, L.; Vaccari, M.; Franceschini, A.; Arumugam, V.; Aussel, H.; Béthermin, M.; Bock, J.; Boselli, A.; Buat, V.; Burgarella, D.; Clements, D. L.; Conley, A.; Conversi, L.; Cooray, A.; Dowell, C. D.; Farrah, D.; Feltre, A.; Glenn, J.; Griffin, M.; Hatziminaoglou, E.; Heinis, S.; Ibar, E.; Ivison, R. J.; Nguyen, H. T.; O'Halloran, B.; Oliver, S. J.; Page, M. J.; Papageorgiou, A.; Pearson, C. P.; Pérez-Fournon, I.; Pohlen, M.; Rigopoulou, D.; Roseboom, I. G.; Rowan-Robinson, M.; Schulz, B.; Scott, Douglas; Seymour, N.; Shupe, D. L.; Smith, A. J.; Symeonidis, M.; Valtchanov, I.; Viero, M.; Wang, L.; Wardlow, J.; Xu, C. K.; Zemcov, M.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 456, Issue 2, p.1999-2023
Advertised on:
2
2016
Citations
41
Refereed citations
39
Description
We used wide-area surveys over 39 deg2 by the HerMES
(Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey) collaboration, performed
with the Herschel Observatory SPIRE multiwavelength camera, to estimate
the low-redshift, 0.02 < z < 0.5, monochromatic luminosity
functions (LFs) of galaxies at 250, 350 and 500 μm. Within this
redshift interval, we detected 7087 sources in five independent sky
areas, ˜40 per cent of which have spectroscopic redshifts, while
for the remaining objects photometric redshifts were used. The SPIRE LFs
in different fields did not show any field-to-field variations beyond
the small differences to be expected from cosmic variance. SPIRE flux
densities were also combined with Spitzer photometry and multiwavelength
archival data to perform a complete spectral energy distribution fitting
analysis of SPIRE detected sources to calculate precise k-corrections,
as well as the bolometric infrared (IR; 8-1000 μm) LFs and their
low-z evolution from a combination of statistical estimators.
Integration of the latter prompted us to also compute the local
luminosity density and the comoving star formation rate density (SFRD)
for our sources, and to compare them with theoretical predictions of
galaxy formation models. The LFs show significant and rapid luminosity
evolution already at low redshifts, 0.02 < z < 0.2, with
L_{IR}^{*} ∝ (1+z)^{6.0± 0.4} and Φ _{IR}^{*} ∝
(1+z)^{-2.1± 0.4}, L_{250}^{*} ∝ (1+z)^{5.3± 0.2} and
Φ _{250}^{*} ∝ (1+z)^{-0.6± 0.4} estimated using the IR
bolometric and the 250 μm LFs, respectively. Converting our IR LD
estimate into an SFRD assuming a standard Salpeter initial mass function
and including the unobscured contribution based on the UV
dust-uncorrected emission from local galaxies, we estimate an SFRD
scaling of SFRD0 + 0.08z, where SFRD0 ≃ (1.9
± 0.03) × 10-2 [M⊙
Mpc-3] is our total SFRD estimate at z ˜ 0.02.