http://arxiv.org/abs/1611.04517
Cosmic far-infrared background (CFIRB) probes unresolved dusty star-forming galaxies across cosmic time and is complementary to ultraviolet/optical probes of galaxy evolution. In this work, we interpret the observed CFIRB anisotropies using an empirical model based on recent galaxy survey results, including stellar mass functions, star-forming main sequence, and dust attenuation. Without introducing new parameters, our model agrees well with the CFIRB anisotropies observed by Planck and the submillimeter number counts observed by Herschel. We find that the commonly used linear relation between infrared luminosity and star-formation rate over-produces the observed CFIRB amplitudes, and lower infrared luminosities from low-mass galaxies are required. Our results indicate that CFIRB not only provides a consistency check for galaxy evolution models but also informs the star-formation rate and dust content for low-mass galaxies.
H. Wu and O. Dore
Tue, 15 Nov 16
16/86
Comments: 8 pages, 3 figures
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