Bibcode
Rowan-Robinson, Michael; Babbedge, Tom; Oliver, Seb; Trichas, Markos; Berta, Stefano; Lonsdale, Carol; Smith, Gene; Shupe, David; Surace, Jason; Arnouts, Stephane; Ilbert, Olivier; Le Févre, Olivier; Afonso-Luis, Alejandro; Perez-Fournon, Ismael; Hatziminaoglou, Evanthia; Polletta, Mari; Farrah, Duncan; Vaccari, Mattia
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 386, Issue 2, pp. 697-714.
Advertised on:
5
2008
Citations
176
Refereed citations
167
Description
We present the SWIRE Photometric Redshift Catalogue 1025119 redshifts of
unprecedented reliability and of accuracy comparable with or better than
previous work. Our methodology is based on fixed galaxy and
quasi-stellar object templates applied to data at 0.36-4.5 μm, and on
a set of four infrared emission templates fitted to infrared excess data
at 3.6-170 μm. The galaxy templates are initially empirical, but are
given greater physical validity by fitting star formation histories to
them, which also allows us to estimate stellar masses. The code involves
two passes through the data, to try to optimize recognition of active
galactic nucleus (AGN) dust tori. A few carefully justified priors are
used and are the key to supression of outliers. Extinction,
AV, is allowed as a free parameter. The full reduced
χ2ν (z) distribution is given for each
source, so the full error distribution can be used, and aliases
investigated.
We use a set of 5982 spectroscopic redshifts, taken from the literature
and from our own spectroscopic surveys, to analyse the performance of
our method as a function of the number of photometric bands used in the
solution and the reduced χ2ν. For seven
photometric bands (5 optical + 3.6, 4.5 μm), the rms value of
(zphot - zspec)/(1 + zspec) is 3.5 per
cent, and the percentage of catastrophic outliers [defined as >15 per
cent error in (1 + z)], is ~1 per cent. These rms values are comparable
with the best achieved in other studies, and the outlier fraction is
significantly better. The inclusion of the 3.6- and 4.5-μm IRAC bands
is crucial in supression of outliers.
We discuss the redshift distributions at 3.6 and 24 μm. In individual
fields, structure in the redshift distribution corresponds to clusters
which can be seen in the spectroscopic redshift distribution, so the
photometric redshifts are a powerful tool for large-scale structure
studies. 10 per cent of sources in the SWIRE photometric redshift
catalogue have z > 2, and 4 per cent have z > 3, so this catalogue
is a huge resource for high-redshift galaxies.
A key parameter for understanding the evolutionary status of infrared
galaxies is Lir/Lopt. For cirrus galaxies this is
a measure of the mean extinction in the interstellar medium of the
galaxy. There is a population of ultraluminous galaxies with cool dust
and we have shown SEDs for some of the reliable examples. For
starbursts, we estimate the specific star formation rate,
φ*/M*. Although the very highest values of
this ratio tend to be associated with Arp220 starbursts, by no means all
ultraluminous galaxies are. We discuss an interesting population of
galaxies with elliptical-like spectral energy distributions in the
optical and luminous starbursts in the infrared.
For dust tori around type 1 AGN, Ltor/Lopt is a
measure of the torus covering factor and we deduce a mean covering
factor of 40 per cent.
Our infrared templates also allow us to estimate dust masses for all
galaxies with an infrared excess.
Related projects
Formation and Evolution of Galaxies: Observations in Infrared and other Wavelengths
This IAC research group carries out several extragalactic projects in different spectral ranges, using space as well as ground-based telescopes, to study the cosmological evolution of galaxies and the origin of nuclear activity in active galaxies. The group is a member of the international consortium which built the SPIRE instrument for the
Ismael
Pérez Fournon