4.7 Article

Clustering of the IR background light with Spitzer:: Contribution from resolved sources

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 657, Issue 1, Pages 37-50

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1086/511293

Keywords

cosmology : theory; diffuse radiation; infrared : galaxies; large-scale structure of universe

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We describe the angular power spectrum of resolved sources at 3.6 mu m (L band) in Spitzer imaging data of the GOODS HDF-N, the GOODS CDF-S, and the NDWFS Bootes field in several source magnitude bins. We also measure angular power spectra of resolved sources in the Bootes field at K-s and J bands using ground-based IR imaging data. In the three bands, J, K-s, and L, we detect the clustering of galaxies on top of the shot-noise power spectrum at multipoles between l similar to 10(2) and 10(5). The angular power spectra range from the large, linear scales to small, nonlinear scales of galaxy clustering, and in some magnitude ranges show departure from a power-law clustering spectrum. We consider a halo model to describe clustering measurements and to establish the halo occupation number parameters of IR bright galaxies at redshifts around one. The typical halo mass scale at which two or more IR galaxies with L-band Vega magnitude between 17 and 19 are found in the same halo is between 9 x 10(11) and 7 x 10(12) M-circle dot at the 1 sigma confidence level; this is consistent with the previous halo mass estimates for bright, red galaxies at z similar to 1. We also extend our clustering results and completeness-corrected faint-source number counts in GOODS fields to understand the underlying nature of unresolved sources responsible for IR background (IRB) anisotropies that were detected in deep Spitzer images. While these unresolved fluctuations were measured at subarcminute angular scales, if a high-redshift diffuse component associated with first galaxies exists in the IRB, then it's clustering properties are best studied with shallow, wide-field images that allow a measurement of the clustering spectrum from a few degrees to arcminute angular scales.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available