A Significant Population of Very Luminous Dust-Obscured Galaxies at Redshift z ~ 2
Arjun Dey (1), B. T. Soifer (2), Vandana Desai (2), Kate Brand (3),, Emeric LeFloc'h (4), Michael J. Brown (5), Buell T. Jannuzi (1), Lee Armus, (2), Shane Bussmann (6), Mark Brodwin (1), Chao Bian (2), Peter Eisenhardt, (7), Sarah Higdon (8), Daniel Weedman (9)

TL;DR
This paper identifies a large population of dust-obscured galaxies at redshift z~2 using a simple mid-IR to optical flux ratio method, revealing their significant contribution to cosmic infrared luminosity and potential role in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new simple selection technique for high-redshift dust-obscured galaxies based on mid-IR to optical flux ratios, uncovering their properties and significance.
Findings
Detected ~2,600 DOG candidates in 8.6 sq.deg field.
DOGs have a broad redshift distribution centered at z~2.
They contribute up to 100% of the IR luminosity density at z~2.
Abstract
Observations with Spitzer Space Telescope have recently revealed a significant population of high-redshift z~2 dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) with large mid-IR to UV luminosity ratios. These galaxies have been missed in traditional optical studies of the distant universe. We present a simple method for selecting this high-z population based solely on the ratio of the observed mid-IR 24um to optical R-band flux density. In the 8.6 sq.deg Bootes NDWFS Field, we uncover ~2,600 DOG candidates (= 0.089/sq.arcmin) with 24um flux densities F24>0.3mJy and (R-[24])>14 (i.e., F[24]/F[R] > 1000). These galaxies have no counterparts in the local universe, and become a larger fraction of the population at fainter F24, representing 13% of the sources at 0.3~mJy. DOGs exhibit evidence of both star-formation and AGN activity, with the brighter 24um sources being more AGN- dominated. We have measured…
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