Simulations of the cosmic infrared and submillimeter background for future large surveys: II. Removing the low-redshift contribution to the anisotropies using stacking
N. Fernandez-Conde, G. Lagache, J-L. Puget, H. Dole

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how stacking techniques can effectively separate low-redshift contributions from high-redshift sources in cosmic infrared background maps, enabling clearer analysis of distant galaxy clustering.
Contribution
It introduces a novel stacking-based method to remove low-redshift anisotropies from CIB maps, improving the study of high-redshift galaxy clustering.
Findings
Stacking can measure mean fluxes of sources 4-6 times fainter than noise at 350μm.
The method achieves excellent removal of z<2 anisotropies using COSMOS data.
It enables creation of high-redshift dominated maps for galaxy evolution studies.
Abstract
Herschel and Planck are surveying the sky at unprecedented angular scales and sensitivities over large areas. But both experiments are limited by source confusion in the submillimeter. The high confusion noise in particular restricts the study of the clustering properties of the sources that dominate the cosmic infrared background. At these wavelengths, it is more appropriate to consider the statistics of the unresolved component. In particular, high clustering will contribute in excess of Poisson noise in the power spectra of CIB anisotropies. These power spectra contain contributions from sources at all redshift. We show how the stacking technique can be used to separate the different redshift contributions to the power spectra. We use simulations of CIB representative of realistic Spitzer, Herschel, Planck, and SCUBA-2 observations. We stack the 24um sources in longer wavelengths…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
