A Deep 1.2 mm Map of the Lockman Hole North Field
Robert R. Lindner, Andrew J. Baker, Alain Omont, Alexandre Beelen,, Frazer N. Owen, Frank Bertoldi, Herve Dole, Nicolas Fiolet, Andrew I. Harris,, Rob J. Ivison, Carol J. Lonsdale, Dieter Lutz, and Mari Polletta

TL;DR
This paper presents a deep 1.2 mm continuum map of the Lockman Hole North field, detecting 41 sources, analyzing their properties, and estimating their contribution to the cosmic infrared background, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 1.2 mm number counts and clustering analysis in this field, extending sensitivity below previous limits and linking millimeter sources to multi-wavelength counterparts.
Findings
Detected 41 sources with S/N > 4.0, flux densities 2-5 mJy.
Resolved approximately 3% of the cosmic infrared background at 1.2 mm.
Found evidence of clustering among the millimeter sources at 95% confidence.
Abstract
We present deep 1.2 mm continuum mapping of a 566 arcmin^2 area within the Lockman Hole North field, previously a target of the Spitzer Wide-area Infrared Extragalactic (SWIRE) survey and extremely deep 20 cm mapping with the Very Large Array, which we have obtained using the Max-Planck millimeter bolometer (MAMBO) array on the IRAM 30 m telescope. After filtering, our full map has an RMS sensitivity ranging from 0.45 to 1.5 mJy/beam, with an average of 0.75 mJy/beam. Using the pixel flux distribution in a map made from our best data, we determine the shape, normalization, and approximate flux density cutoff for 1.2 mm number counts well below our nominal sensitivity and confusion limits. After validating our full dataset through comparison with this map, we successfully detect 41 1.2 mm sources with S/N > 4.0 and S(1.2 mm)\simeq 2-5 mJy. We use the most significant of these detections…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
