Extragalactic Background Light Inferred from AEGIS Galaxy SED-type Fractions
A. Dominguez (Universidad de Sevilla/IAA-CSIC), J. R. Primack (UCSC),, D. J. Rosario (UCSC), F. Prada (IAA-CSIC), R. C. Gilmore (SISSA), S. M. Faber, (UCSC), D. C. Koo (UCSC), R. S. Somerville (STSCI), M. A. Perez-Torres, (IAA-CSIC), P. Perez-Gonzalez (Uni. Comp. de Madrid)

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel, observation-based method to determine the spectrum of the extragalactic background light (EBL) across 0.1-1000 microns by analyzing galaxy SED-type fractions and luminosity functions up to redshift 4.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach combining galaxy luminosity functions and SED-type fractions to derive the EBL spectrum directly from observations over a wide redshift range.
Findings
EBL is well constrained from UV to mid-IR wavelengths.
The evolution of galaxy populations and star formation rates is characterized.
Implications for gamma-ray attenuation due to EBL are discussed.
Abstract
The extragalactic background light (EBL) is of fundamental importance both for understanding the entire process of galaxy evolution and for gamma-ray astronomy, but the overall spectrum of the EBL between 0.1-1000 microns has never been determined directly from galaxy spectral energy distribution (SED) observations over a wide redshift range. The evolving, overall spectrum of the EBL is derived here utilizing a novel method based on observations only. This is achieved from the observed evolution of the rest-frame K-band galaxy luminosity function up to redshift 4 (Cirasuolo et al. 2010), combined with a determination of galaxy SED-type fractions. These are based on fitting SWIRE templates to a multiwavelength sample of about 6000 galaxies in the redshift range from 0.2 to 1 from the All-wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS). The changing fractions of quiescent…
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