Galaxy evolution from deep multi-wavelength Infrared surveys: a prelude to Herschel
Alberto Franceschini (1), Giulia Rodighiero (1), Mattia Vaccari (1),, Stefano Berta (2), Lucia Marchetti (1), Gabriele Mainetti (1) (1 - Padova, University, 2 - MPE)

TL;DR
This paper reviews galaxy evolution at IR wavelengths using multi-wavelength data, revealing rapid evolution up to z~1, the emergence of luminous galaxies at z>1, and the significant role of obscured AGN activity in high-redshift IR emission.
Contribution
It introduces new analysis tools for background fluctuations and provides comprehensive observational evidence for galaxy evolution patterns from z=0 to z~2.5.
Findings
Rapid increase in galaxy volume emissivity up to z~1
Presence of a luminous galaxy population dominating at z>1
Obscured AGN activity accounts for over 50% of IR activity at z>1
Abstract
[abridged] At the end of the Spitzer cryogenic mission and the onset of the Herschel era, we review our current knowledge on galaxy evolution at IR wavelengths. We also develop new tools for the analysis of background fluctuations to constrain source counts in regimes of high confusion. We analyse a large variety of new data on galaxy evolution and high-z source populations from Spitzer surveys, as well as complementary data from sub-mm (BLAST) and millimetric ground-based observations. These data confirm earlier indications about a very rapid increase of galaxy volume emissivity up to z~1. This is the fastest evolution rate observed for galaxies at any wavelengths. The observed Spitzer counts at 24 micron require a combination of fast evolution for the dominant population and a bumpy spectrum with substantial PAH emission at z~1 to 2. Confusion-limited number counts at longer…
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