Evolution of the dusty infrared luminosity function from z=0 to z=2.3 using observations from Spitzer
B. Magnelli, D. Elbaz, R.R. Chary, M. Dickinson, D. Le Borgne, D.T., Frayer, C.N.A.Willmer

TL;DR
This study measures the evolution of the infrared luminosity function from redshift 0 to 2.3 using deep Spitzer observations, revealing how IR galaxy populations and star formation rates changed over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed IR luminosity function evolution from z=0 to 2.3 using 24 and 70um data, including a new stacking analysis and IR luminosity estimates.
Findings
IR luminosity function evolves with redshift, mainly in luminosity.
LIRGs dominate IR luminosity density at z~2.
Star formation rate density increases then plateaus from z=1.3 to 2.3.
Abstract
We derive the evolution of the infrared (IR) luminosity function (LF) over the last 4/5ths of cosmic time, using deep 24um and 70um imaging of the GOODS North and South fields. We use an extraction technique based on prior source positions at shorter wavelengths to build the 24 and 70um source catalogs. The majority (93%) of the sources have a spectroscopic (39%) or a photometric redshift (54%) and, in our redshift range of interest (i.e., 1.3<z<2.3) ~20% of the sources have a spectroscopic redshifts. To extend our study to lower 70um luminosities we perform a stacking analysis and we characterize the observed L_24/(1+z) vs L_70/(1+z) correlation. Using spectral energy distribution templates which best fit this correlation, we derive the IR luminosity of sources from their 24 and 70 um fluxes. We then compute the IR LF at z=1.55+/-0.25 and z=2.05+/-0.25. The redshift evolution of the IR…
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