Redshift Distribution of the Faint Submillimeter Galaxy Population

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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10 pages, accepted by The Astronomical Journal for the June 1999 issue

Scientific paper

10.1086/300890

We present a Keck II LRIS spectroscopic follow-up study of the possible optical counterparts to a flux-limited sample of galaxies selected from an 850-micron survey of massive lensing clusters using the SCUBA bolometer array on the JCMT. These sources represent a population of luminous dusty galaxies responsible for the bulk of the 850-micron background detected by COBE and thus for a substantial fraction of the total far-infrared emission in the Universe. We present reliable redshifts for 20 galaxies and redshift limits for a further 4 galaxies selected from the error-boxes of 14 submm sources. Two other submm detections in the sample have no obvious optical counterparts, and the final submm source was only identified from imaging data after the completion of our spectroscopic observations. The optical identifications for 4 of the submm sources have been confirmed through either their detection in CO at mm-wavelengths (two pairs of galaxies at z=2.55 and z=2.80) or from the characteristics of their spectral energy distributions (two of the central cD galaxies in the lensing clusters). Plausible arguments based on the optical spectral properties (starburst or AGN signatures) of the counterparts allow us to identify a further two likely counterparts at z=1.06 and 1.16. For the remaining 8 cases, it is not always clear which, if any, of the optical sources identified are the true counterparts. Possible counterparts for these have redshifts ranging from z=0.18 to z=2.11. Working with the current identifications, we suggest that the majority of the extragalactic background light in the submm is emitted by sources at z<3 and hence that the peak activity in highly-obscured sources (both AGN and starbursts) lies at relatively modest redshifts. (Abridged)

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