A LABOCA survey of submillimeter galaxies behind galaxy clusters
Daniel Johansson, Haukur Sigurdarson, Cathy Horellou (Onsala Space, Observatory, Chalmers University of Technology)

TL;DR
This study uses gravitational lensing and LABOCA observations of galaxy clusters to detect and analyze faint submillimeter galaxies, providing insights into their properties and contribution to cosmic background light.
Contribution
It presents new submillimeter galaxy detections behind galaxy clusters and combines lensing models with stacking analysis to extend understanding of faint galaxy populations.
Findings
Detected 37 submm sources, 14 new.
Identified a sub-mJy intrinsic flux density source.
Submm sources account for 13% of the EBL.
Abstract
Context: Submillimeter galaxies are a population of dusty star-forming galaxies at high redshift. Measuring their properties will help relate them to other types of galaxies, both at high and low redshift. This is needed in order to understand the formation and evolution of galaxies. Aims: We use gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters to probe the faint and abundant submillimeter galaxy population down to a lower flux density level than what can be achieved in blank-field observations. Methods: We use the LABOCA bolometer camera on the APEX telescope to observe five cluster of galaxies at a wavelength of 870 micron. The final maps have an angular resolution of 27.5 arcsec and a point source noise level of 1.2-2.2 mJy. We model the mass distribution in the clusters as superpositions of spherical NFW halos and derive magnification maps that we use to calculate intrinsic flux densities…
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