Far infrared constraints on the contamination by dust obscured galaxies of high-z dropout searches
F. Boone, D. Schaerer, R. Pello, D. Lutz, A. Weiss, E. Egami, I., Smail, M. Rex, T. Rawle, R. Ivison, N. Laporte, A. Beelen, F. Combes, A. W., Blain, J. Richard, J.-P. Kneib, M. Zamojski, M. Dessauges-Zavadsky, B., Altieri, P. van der Werf, M. Swinbank, P. G. Perez-Gonzalez

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how far infrared observations can distinguish low-redshift dusty galaxies from true high-redshift candidates, reducing contamination in high-z galaxy searches.
Contribution
It introduces a method using FIR SED analysis to identify and exclude dust-obscured low-z interlopers in high-redshift galaxy surveys.
Findings
FIR data suggests the candidates are at z~2, not >7.
Standard templates fail to fit the IR part of the SEDs.
Sources resemble dust-obscured galaxies at z~2.
Abstract
The spectral energy distributions (SED) of dusty galaxies at intermediate redshift may look similar to very high redshift galaxies in the optical/near infrared (NIR) domain. This can lead to the contamination of high redshift galaxy searches based on broad band optical/NIR photometry by lower redshift dusty galaxies as both kind of galaxies cannot be distinguished. The contamination rate could be as high as 50%. {This work shows how the far infrared (FIR) domain can help to recognize likely low-z interlopers in an optical/NIR search for high-z galaxies.} We analyse the FIR SEDs of two galaxies proposed as very high redshift () dropout candidates based on deep Hawk-I/VLT observations. The FIR SEDs are sampled with PACS/Herschel at 100 and 160\,m, with SPIRE/Herschel at 250, 350 and 500\,m and with LABOCA/APEX at 870\,m. We find that redshifts would imply extreme…
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.
