Submillimetre point sources from the Archeops experiment: Very Cold Clumps in the Galactic Plane
F.-X. Desert (1), J. F. Macias-Perez (2), F. Mayet (2), G. Giardino, (7), C. Renault (2), J. Aumont (2), A. Benoit (3), J.-Ph. Bernard (4), N., Ponthieu (5), and M. Tristram (6) ((1) LAOG Grenoble, (2) LPSC Grenoble, (3), CRTBT Grenoble, (4) CESR Toulouse, (5) IAS Orsay

TL;DR
Archeops, a balloon-borne experiment primarily designed for CMB measurements, also detected a catalog of 304 bright submillimetre point sources in the Galactic plane, revealing very cold dust-emitting regions with temperatures below 10 K.
Contribution
This paper presents the first catalog of submillimetre point sources from Archeops, including their properties, spectra, and implications for cold dust in the Galaxy.
Findings
Detection of 304 reliable submillimetre sources.
Identification of very cold dust sources with T<10 K.
Inverse T-beta relationship observed in dust emission.
Abstract
Archeops is a balloon-borne experiment, mainly designed to measure the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature anisotropies at high angular resolution (~ 12 arcminutes). By-products of the mission are shallow sensitivity maps over a large fraction of the sky (about 30 %) in the millimetre and submillimetre range at 143, 217, 353 and 545 GHz. From these maps, we produce a catalog of bright submillimetre point sources. We present in this paper the processing and analysis of the Archeops point sources. Redundancy across detectors is the key factor allowing to sort out glitches from genuine point sources in the 20 independent maps. We look at the properties of the most reliable point sources, totalling 304. Fluxes range from 1 to 10,000 Jy (at the frequencies covering 143 to 545 GHz). All sources are either planets (2) or of galactic origin. Longitude range is from 75 to 198 degrees.…
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