A physical model for the origin of the diffuse cosmic infrared background
Joshua D. Younger (IAS), Philip F. Hopkins (Berkeley)

TL;DR
This paper develops a physical model explaining the origin of the cosmic diffuse infrared background, attributing it mainly to star formation in galaxies at redshifts 0.5-1 and above, with minimal contribution from AGN or mergers.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-empirical model that isolates the physics driving diffuse IR emission, quantifying contributions from different galaxy types and AGN, and predicting gamma-ray opacity.
Findings
Most of the CDIRB is from z=0.5-1 and z>1.
Low to moderate luminosity galaxies dominate IR emission.
Obscured AGN contribute less than 2% to the CDIRB.
Abstract
We present a physical model for origin of the cosmic diffuse infrared background (CDIRB). By utilizing the observed stellar mass function and its evolution as input to a semi-empirical model of galaxy formation, we isolate the physics driving diffuse IR emission. The model includes contributions from three primary sources of IR emission: steady-state star formation owing to isolated disk galaxies, interaction-driven bursts of star formation owing to close encounters and mergers, and obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN). We find that most of the CDIRB is produced by equal contributions from objects at z=0.5-1 and z>1, as suggested by recent observations. Of those sources, the vast majority of the emission originates in systems with low to moderate IR luminosities (L_{IR}<10^{12} $L_sun); the most luminous objects contribute significant flux only at high-redshifts (z>2). All star…
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