Bibcode
Rowan-Robinson, M.; Lonsdale, C.; Smith, G.; Surace, J.; Shupe, D.; Polletta, M.; Siana, B.; Babbedge, T.; Oliver, S.; Perez-Fournon, I.; Franceschini, A.; Afonso, A.; Luis, Clements, D.; Davoodi, P.; Domingue, D.; Efstathiou, A.; Fang, F.; Farrah, D.; Frayer, D.; Hatziminaoglou, E.; Gonzalez-Solares, E.; Xu, K.; Padgett, D.; Vaccari, M.
Bibliographical reference
The Second Annual Spitzer Science Center Conference: Infrared Diagnostics of Galaxy Evolution. ASP Conference Series, Vol. 381, proceedings of the conference held 14-16 November, 2005 in Pasadena, California, USA. Edited by Ranga-Ram Chary, Harry I. Teplitz and Kartik Sheth. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2008., p.216
Advertised on:
3
2008
Citations
6
Refereed citations
5
Description
We discuss spectral energy distributions, photometric redshifts,
redshift distributions, luminosity functions, source-counts and the far
infrared to optical luminosity ratio for sources in the SWIRE Legacy
Survey.
The spectral energy distributions of selected SWIRE sources are modelled
in terms of a simple set of galaxy and quasar templates in the optical
and near infrared, and with a set of dust emission templates (cirrus,
M82 starburst, Arp 220 starburst, and AGN dust torus) in the mid
infrared.
The optical data, together with the IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 μm data, have
been used to determine photometric redshifts. For galaxies with known
spectroscopic redshifts there is a notable improvement in the
photometric redshift when the IRAC data are used, with a reduction in
the rms scatter from 10 % in (1+z) to 5 %. While further spectroscopic
data are needed to confirm this result, the prospect of determining good
photometric redshifts for the 2 million extragalactic objects in SWIRE
is excellent. The distribution of the different infrared sed types in
the L_{ir}/L_{opt} versus L_{ir} plane, where L_{ir} and L_{opt} are the
infrared and optical bolometric luminosities, is discussed.
Source-counts at 24, 70 and 160 μm are discussed, and luminosity
functions at 3.6 and 24 μm are presented.