A Population of z>2 Far-Infrared Herschel-SPIRE selected Starbursts
C. M. Casey (1), S. Berta (2), M. B\'ethermin (3,4), J. Bock (5,6), C., Bridge (5), D. Burgarella (7), E. Chapin (8,9), S. C. Chapman (10,11), D. L., Clements (12), A. Conley (13), C. J. Conselice (14), A. Cooray (15,5), D., Farrah (16), E. Hatziminaoglou (17), R. J. Ivison (18

TL;DR
This study spectroscopically characterizes a large sample of high-redshift, infrared-luminous starburst galaxies selected by Herschel-SPIRE, revealing their significant contribution to cosmic star formation at z>2.
Contribution
First comprehensive spectroscopic analysis of Herschel-selected z>2 starbursts, establishing their role in early universe star formation and providing well-characterized sample selection.
Findings
Identified some of the most luminous distant infrared galaxies.
Quantified their contribution to cosmic star formation rate density.
Confirmed redshifts and provided spectral energy distributions.
Abstract
We present spectroscopic observations for a sample of 36 Herschel-SPIRE 250-500um selected galaxies (HSGs) at 2<z<5 from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Redshifts are confirmed as part of a large redshift survey of Herschel-SPIRE-selected sources covering ~0.93deg^2 in six extragalactic legacy fields. Observations were taken with the Keck I Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) and the Keck II DEep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph (DEIMOS). Precise astrometry, needed for spectroscopic follow-up, is determined by identification of counterparts at 24um or 1.4GHz using a cross-identification likelihood matching method. Individual source luminosities range from log(L_IR/Lsun)=12.5-13.6 (corresponding to star formation rates 500-9000Msun/yr, assuming a Salpeter IMF), constituting some of the most intrinsically luminous, distant infrared galaxies yet discovered.…
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