Building the cosmic infrared background brick by brick with Herschel/PEP
S. Berta, B. Magnelli, R. Nordon, D. Lutz, S. Wuyts, B. Altieri, P., Andreani, H. Aussel, H. Castaneda, J. Cepa, A. Cimatti, E. Daddi, D. Elbaz,, N.M. Foerster Schreiber, R. Genzel, E. Le Floc'h, R. Maiolino, I., Perez-Fournon, A. Poglitsch, P. Popesso, F. Pozzi, L. Riguccini

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel/PEP data to analyze the cosmic infrared background across multiple wavelengths, revealing its redshift distribution, contributing galaxy populations, and the effects of observational confusion.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of the CIB at 70, 100, and 160 microns, including redshift contributions and confusion limits, advancing understanding of galaxy evolution and background composition.
Findings
Resolved 58-74% of CIB at the three wavelengths.
Most CIB emitted by galaxies with infrared luminosities of 10^11-10^12 L_sun.
Over half of the CIB was emitted at redshift z<=1.
Abstract
The cosmic infrared background (CIB) includes roughly half of the energy radiated by all galaxies at all wavelengths across cosmic time, as observed at the present epoch. The PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) survey is exploited here to study the CIB and its redshift differential, at 70, 100 and 160 micron, where the background peaks. Combining PACS observations of the GOODS-S, GOODS-N, Lockman Hole and COSMOS areas, we define number counts spanning over more than two orders of magnitude in flux: from ~1 mJy to few hundreds mJy. Stacking of 24 micron sources and P(D) statistics extend the analysis down to ~0.2 mJy. Taking advantage of the wealth of ancillary data in PEP fields, differential number counts and CIB are studied up to z=5. Based on these counts, we discuss the effects of confusion on PACS blank field observations and provide confusion limits for the three bands considered. The…
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