2,259 research outputs found
FIRBACK: II. Data Reduction and Calibration of the 170 micron ISO Deep Cosmological Survey
We present the final reduction and calibration of the FIRBACK ISOPHOT data.
FIRBACK is a deep cosmological survey performed at 170 microns. This paper
deals with the ISOPHOT C200 camera with the C160 filter. We review the whole
data reduction process and compare our final calibration with DIRBE (for the
extended emission) and IRAS (for point sources). The FIRBACK source extraction
and galaxy counts is discussed in a companion paper (Dole et al., 2001).Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 9 pages, includes new aa.cls. Also
available (with better quality figures) at http://wwwfirback.ias.u-psud.fr
and http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~hdole/firback (new aa.cls is here
Power Spectrum Analysis of Far-IR Background Fluctuations in 160 Micron Maps From the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer
We describe data reduction and analysis of fluctuations in the cosmic far-IR
background (CFIB) in observations with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for
Spitzer (MIPS) instrument 160 micron detectors. We analyzed observations of an
8.5 square degree region in the Lockman Hole, part of the largest low-cirrus
mapping observation with this instrument. We measured the power spectrum of the
CFIB in these observations by fitting a power law to the IR cirrus component,
the dominant foreground contaminant, and subtracting this cirrus signal. The
CFIB power spectrum in the range 0.2 arc min^{-1} <k< 0.5 arc min^{-1} is
consistent with previous measurements of a relatively flat component. However,
we find a large power excess at low k, which falls steeply to the flat
component in the range 0.03 arc min^{-1} <k< 0.1 arc min^{-1}. This low-k power
spectrum excess is consistent with predictions of a source clustering
"signature". This is the first report of such a detection in the far-IR.Comment: This is the version of the paper accepted by A&A, which includes
various changes and new material. The superior-quality PDF with integrated
figures may be downloaded at
http://www-astro.lbl.gov/~bruce/spitzerpaper1/cfibaa_pub.pdf 15 pages,
figures integrated with text. This paper supersedes astro-ph/050416
Microwave and radio emission of dusty star-forming galaxies: Implication for the cosmic radio background
We use the most up-to-date cosmological evolution models of star-forming (SF)
galaxies and radio sources to compute the extragalactic number counts and the
cosmic background from 408MHz to 12THz. The model of SF galaxies reproduces the
constraints obtained by Spitzer, Herschel, and ground-based submm/mm
experiments: number counts, redshift distribution of galaxies, cosmic
background intensity and anisotropies. The template SEDs of this model are
extrapolated to the radio adding synchrotron, free-free, and spinning dust
emissions. To fix the synchrotron intensity, we use the IR/radio flux ratio,
q70, and a spectral index beta=-3. For a constant q70, our model added to the
AGN contribution provides a good fit to the number counts from 12THz to 408MHz
and to the CIB. Spinning dust accounts for up to 20% of the cosmic microwave
background produced by SF galaxies, but for less than 10% of the total
background when AGN are included. The SF galaxies account for 77.5% of the
number counts at 1.4GHz for a flux of 1e-4Jy. However, the model does not
explain the CRB measured with the ARCADE2 experiment. Considering the case when
q70 decreases strongly with redshift, this still does not explain the ARCADE2
results. It also yields to an overestimate of the low-flux number counts in the
radio. Thus, we rule out a steep variation of q70 with redshift at least for
z<3.5. Adding a population of faint SF galaxies at high redshift (Lir<1e11Lsun
and 4<z<6), which would reproduce the ARCADE2 results, leads to predictions of
the CIB much higher than what is observed, ruling out this as the explanation
for the ARCADE2 results. Considering our findings and previous studies, we
conclude that if the radio emission measured by ARCADE2 is astrophysical in
origin, it has to originate in the Galaxy or in a new kind of radio sources
(with no mid- to far-IR counterparts) or emission mechanism still to be
discovered.Comment: accepted for publication by A&A, modification of one citatio
Comments on the paper "The initial conditions of isolated star formation - VI. SCUBA mapping of prestellar cores" (Kirk et al. 2005)
In their survey paper of prestellar cores with SCUBA, Kirk et al. (2005) have
discarded two of our papers on L183 (Pagani et al. 2003, 2004). However these
papers bring two important pieces of information that they cannot ignore.
Namely, the real structure of L183 and the very poor correlation between
submillimeter and far infrared (FIR) dust emission beyond \Avb 15
mag. Making the erroneous assumption that it is the same dust that we are
seeing in emission at both 200 and 850 m, they derive constant
temperatures which are only approximate, and column densities which are too
low. In fact dust temperatures do decrease inside dark clouds and the FIR
emission is only tracing the outer parts of the dark clouds (Pagani et al.
2004
Determination of the cosmic far-infrared background level with the ISOPHOT instrument
The cosmic infrared background (CIRB) consists mainly of the integrated light
of distant galaxies. In the far-infrared the current estimates of its surface
brightness are based on the measurements of the COBE satellite. Independent
confirmation of these results is still needed from other instruments. In this
paper we derive estimates of the far-infrared CIRB using measurements made with
the ISOPHOT instrument aboard the ISO satellite. The results are used to seek
further confirmation of the CIRB levels that have been derived by various
groups using the COBE data. We study three regions of very low cirrus emission.
The surface brightness observed with the ISOPHOT instrument at 90, 150, and 180
um is correlated with hydrogen 21 cm line data from the Effelsberg radio
telescope. Extrapolation to zero hydrogen column density gives an estimate for
the sum of extragalactic signal plus zodiacal light. The zodiacal light is
subtracted using ISOPHOT data at shorter wavelengths. Thus, the resulting
estimate of the far-infrared CIRB is based on ISO measurements alone. In the
range 150 to 180 um, we obtain a CIRB value of 1.08+-0.32+-0.30 MJy/sr quoting
statistical and systematic errors separately. In the 90 um band, we obtain a
2-sigma upper limit of 2.3 MJy/sr. The estimates derived from ISOPHOT
far-infrared maps are consistent with the earlier COBE results.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 17 page
Dissecting the high-z interstellar medium through intensity mapping cross-correlations
We explore the detection, with upcoming spectroscopic surveys, of
three-dimensional power spectra of emission line fluctuations produced in
different phases of the Interstellar Medium (ISM) by ionized carbon, ionized
nitrogen and neutral oxygen at redshift z>4. The emission line [CII] from
ionized carbon at 157.7 micron, and multiple emission lines from carbon
monoxide, are the main targets of planned ground-based surveys, and an
important foreground for future space-based surveys like the Primordial
Inflation Explorer (PIXIE). However, the oxygen [OI] (145.5 micron) line, and
the nitrogen [NII] (121.9 micron and 205.2 micron) lines, might be detected in
correlation with [CII] with reasonable signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). These lines
are important coolants of both the neutral and the ionized medium, and probe
multiple phases of the ISM. We compute predictions of the three-dimensional
power spectra for two surveys designed to target the [CII] line, showing that
they have the required sensitivity to detect cross-power spectra with the [OI]
line, and the [NII] lines with sufficient SNR. The importance of
cross-correlating multiple lines is twofold. On the one hand, we will have
multiple probes of the different phases of the ISM, which is key to understand
the interplay between energetic sources, the gas and dust at high redshift.
This kind of studies will be useful for a next-generation space observatory
such as the NASA Far-IR Surveyor. On the other end, emission lines from
external galaxies are an important foreground when measuring spectral
distortions of the Cosmic Microwave Background spectrum with future space-based
experiments like PIXIE; measuring fluctuations in the intensity mapping regime
will help constraining the mean amplitude of these lines, and will allow us to
better handle this important foreground.Comment: 13 pages, 2 table, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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