The contribution of star-forming galaxies to fluctuations in the cosmic background light
Han-Seek Kim (ICC, UMelb), C. G. Lacey (ICC), S. Cole (ICC), C. M., Baugh (ICC), C. S. Frenk (ICC), G. Efstathiou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new framework to predict the contribution of star-forming galaxies to cosmic background light fluctuations, aiding in cosmological parameter estimation and understanding galaxy formation.
Contribution
It develops a novel method combining dark matter halo occupation with N-body simulations to accurately predict infrared background fluctuations.
Findings
Predictions align with observations at high frequencies and small scales.
Discrepancies at large scales highlight constraints on galaxy formation models.
Framework successfully reproduces galaxy counts and redshift distributions.
Abstract
Star-forming galaxies which are too faint to be detected individually produce intensity fluctuations in the cosmic background light. This contribution needs to be taken into account as a foreground when using the primordial signal to constrain cosmological parameters. The extragalactic fluctuations are also interesting in their own right as they depend on the star formation history of the Universe and the way in which this connects with the formation of cosmic structure. We present a new framework which allows us to predict the occupation of dark matter haloes by star-forming galaxies and uses this information, in conjunction with an N-body simulation of structure formation, to predict the power spectrum of intensity fluctuations in the infrared background. We compute the emission from galaxies at far-infrared, millimetre and radio wavelengths. Our method gives accurate predictions for…
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