The BLAST 250-micron selected galaxy population in GOODS-South
J.S.Dunlop, P.A.R.Ade, J.J.Bock, E.L.Chapin, M.Cirasuolo,, K.E.K.Coppin, M.J.Devlin, M.Griffin, T.R.Greve, J.O.Gundersen, M.Halpern,, P.C.Hargrave, D.H.Hughes, R.J.Ivison, J.Klein, A.Kovacs, G.Marsden,, P.Mauskopf, C.B.Netterfield, L.Olmi, E.Pascale, G.Patanchon, M.Rex, D.Scott,

TL;DR
This study characterizes the brightest 250-micron galaxies in GOODS-South, revealing their redshift distribution, nature, and dust properties, including both low-redshift spirals and high-redshift starbursts, using multi-wavelength data.
Contribution
First complete redshift distribution for a deep 250-micron galaxy sample, combining radio, optical, and submillimeter data to identify and analyze galaxy properties.
Findings
Identified radio counterparts for 17 of 20 sources.
Detected a mix of low-redshift spirals and high-redshift starbursts.
Found dust temperatures consistent with 40K black-body models.
Abstract
We identify and investigate the nature of the 20 brightest 250-micron sources detected by the BLAST within the central 150 sq. arcmin of the GOODS-South field. Aided by the available deep VLA radio imaging, reaching S_1.4 = 30 micro-Jy, we have identified radio counterparts for 17/20 of the 250-micron sources. The resulting enhanced positional accuracy of ~1 arcsec has then allowed us to exploit the deep multi-frequency imaging of GOODS-South to establish secure galaxy counterparts for the 17 radio-identified sources, and plausible galaxy candidates for the 3 radio-unidentified sources. Confusion is a serious issue for this deep BLAST 250-micron survey, due to the large size of the beam. Nevertheless, we argue that our chosen counterparts are significant, and often dominant contributors to the measured BLAST flux densities. For all of these 20 galaxies we have been able to determine…
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