1 research outputs found
Unbiased large spectroscopic surveys of galaxies selected by SPICA using dust bands
The mid-infrared (IR) range contains many spectral features associated with
large molecules and dust grains such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
and silicates. These are usually very strong compared to fine-structure gas
lines, and thus valuable in studying the spectral properties of faint distant
galaxies. In this paper, we evaluate the capability of low-resolution mid-IR
spectroscopic surveys of galaxies that could be performed by SPICA. The surveys
are designed to address the question how star formation and black hole
accretion activities evolved over cosmic time through spectral diagnostics of
the physical conditions of the interstellar/circumnuclear media in galaxies. On
the basis of results obtained with Herschel far-IR photometric surveys of
distant galaxies and Spitzer and AKARI near- to mid-IR spectroscopic
observations of nearby galaxies, we estimate the numbers of the galaxies at
redshift z > 0.5, which are expected to be detected in the PAH features or dust
continuum by a wide (10 deg^2) or deep (1 deg^2) blind survey, both for a given
observation time of 600 hours. As by-products of the wide blind survey, we also
expect to detect debris disks, through the mid-IR excess above the photospheric
emission of nearby main-sequence stars, and we estimate their number. We
demonstrate that the SPICA mid-IR surveys will efficiently provide us with
unprecedentedly large spectral samples, which can be studied further in the
far-IR with SPICA.Comment: Paper accepted for publication on PASA on 18th October 2017, as part
of the SPICA Special Issu