The SCUBA HAlf Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) -- V. Submillimetre properties of near-infrared--selected galaxies in the Subaru/XMM--Newton deep field
T. Takagi, A. M. J. Mortier, K. Shimasaku, K. Coppin, A. Pope, R. J., Ivison, H. Hanami, S. Serjeant, D. L. Clements, R. S. Priddey, J. S. Dunlop,, T. Takata, I. Aretxaga, S. C. Chapman, S. A. Eales, D. Farrah, G. L. Granato,, M. Halpern, D. H. Hughes, E. van Kampen, D. Scott

TL;DR
This study investigates the submillimetre properties of high-redshift near-infrared-selected galaxies using the SHADES survey, revealing that a significant fraction of extremely red BzK galaxies are submm-bright and contribute notably to the submm background.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis linking NIR-selected high-redshift galaxies with submm emission, highlighting the role of extremely red BzKs in submm background contribution.
Findings
All submm-bright NIR-selected galaxies satisfy BzK criteria.
Up to 20% of extremely red BzKs are submm galaxies.
BzKs contribute 10-15% to the submm background.
Abstract
We have studied the submillimetre (submm) properties of the following classes of near-infrared (NIR)-selected massive galaxies at high redshifts: BzK-selected star-forming galaxies (BzKs); distant red galaxies (DRGs); and extremely red objects (EROs). We used the SCUBA HAlf Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES), the largest uniform submm survey to date. Partial overlap of SIRIUS/NIR images and SHADES in SXDF has allowed us to identify 4 submm-bright NIR-selected galaxies, which are detected in the mid-infrared, 24 micron, and the radio, 1.4 GHz. We find that all of our submm-bright NIR-selected galaxies satisfy the BzK selection criteria, except for one galaxy whose B-z and z-K colours are however close to the BzK colour boundary. Two of the submm-bright NIR-selected galaxies satisfy all of the selection criteria we considered, i.e. they belong to the BzK-DRG-ERO overlapping population,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
