BLAST: the Redshift Survey
Stephen Eales, Edward L. Chapin, Mark J. Devlin, Simon Dye, Mark, Halpern, David H. Hughes, Gaelen Marsden, Philip Mauskopf, Lorenzo Moncelsi,, Calvin B. Netterfield, Enzo Pascale, Guillaume Patanchon, Gwenifer Raymond,, Marie Rex, Douglas Scott, Christopher Semisch, Brian Siana

TL;DR
This study presents spectroscopic redshifts for BLAST-detected galaxies, confirming their star-forming nature, testing photometric redshift accuracy, and measuring luminosity and dust-mass function evolution up to z=1.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurements of the luminosity and dust-mass functions for BLAST galaxies, demonstrating significant evolution up to redshift 1.
Findings
Most BLAST counterparts are star-forming galaxies.
Photometric redshifts are reliable even with high dust content.
Strong evolution in luminosity and dust-mass functions up to z=1.
Abstract
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) has recently surveyed ~8.7 deg^2 centered on GOODS-South at 250, 350, and 500 microns. In Dye et al. (2009) we presented the catalogue of sources detected at 5-sigma in at least one band in this field and the probable counterparts to these sources in other wavebands. In this paper, we present the results of a redshift survey in which we succeeded in measuring redshifts for 82 of these counterparts. The spectra show that the BLAST counterparts are mostly star-forming galaxies but not extreme ones when compared to those found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Roughly one quarter of the BLAST counterparts contain an active nucleus. We have used the spectroscopic redshifts to carry out a test of the ability of photometric redshift methods to estimate the redshifts of dusty galaxies, showing that the standard methods work well…
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