A Herschel view of the far-infrared properties of submillimetre galaxies
B. Magnelli, D. Lutz, P. Santini, A. Saintonge, S. Berta, M. Albrecht,, B. Altieri, P. Andreani, H. Aussel, F. Bertoldi, M. Bethermin, A., Bongiovanni, P. Capak, S. Chapman, J. Cepa, A. Cimatti, A. Cooray, E. Daddi,, A.L.R. Danielson, H. Dannerbauer, J.S. Dunlop, D. Elbaz

TL;DR
This study analyzes Herschel observations of 61 submillimetre galaxies, revealing diverse infrared luminosities and dust temperatures, and suggests that the most luminous ones are likely merger-driven starbursts, while less luminous galaxies may evolve secularly.
Contribution
First comprehensive Herschel-based analysis of a large SMG sample, linking dust properties with galaxy evolution modes and merger scenarios.
Findings
High-luminosity SMGs show warm dust and high SFRs, indicating merger-driven starbursts.
Low-luminosity SMGs have cold dust and lie near the main sequence, suggesting secular evolution.
Dust emissivity index measured as beta=2.0+/-0.2.
Abstract
We study a sample of 61 submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) selected from ground-based surveys, with known spectroscopic redshifts and observed with Herschel as part of the PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) and the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) key programmes. We use the broad far-infrared wavelength coverage (100-600um) provided by the combination of PACS and SPIRE observations. Using a power-law temperature distribution model to derive infrared luminosities and dust temperatures, we measure a dust emissivity spectral index for SMGs of beta=2.0+/-0.2. Our results unveil the diversity of the SMG population. Some SMGs exhibit extreme infrared luminosities of ~10^13 Lsun and relatively warm dust components, while others are fainter (~10^12 Lsun) and are biased towards cold dust temperatures. The extreme infrared luminosities of some SMGs (LIR>10^12.7 Lsun, 26/61 systems) imply…
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