HerMES: Unveiling obscured star formation - the far infrared luminosity function of ultraviolet-selected galaxies at z~1.5
S. Heinis, V.Buat, M. B\'ethermin, H. Aussel, J. Bock, A. Boselli, D., Burgarella, A. Conley, A. Cooray, D. Farrah, E. Ibar, O. Ilbert, R. J., Ivison, G. Magdis, G. Marsden, S. J. Oliver, M. J. Page, G. Rodighiero, Y., Roehlly, B. Schulz, Douglas Scott, A. J. Smith, M. Viero

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel data to analyze the far-infrared properties of UV-selected galaxies at z~1.5, reconstructing their IR luminosity function and estimating their contribution to cosmic star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first IR luminosity function for UV-selected galaxies at z~1.5 and compares it with IR-selected samples, highlighting the relation between UV and IR properties.
Findings
IR to UV luminosity ratio is roughly constant across UV luminosities.
Reconstructed IR luminosity function matches IR-selected functions at faint luminosities.
UV-selected galaxies account for 52-89% of the star-formation rate density at z~1.5.
Abstract
We study the far-infrared (IR) and sub-millimeter properties of a sample of ultraviolet (UV) selected galaxies at z\sim1.5. Using stacking at 250, 350 and 500 um from Herschel Space Observatory SPIRE imaging of the COSMOS field obtained within the HerMES key program, we derive the mean IR luminosity as a function of both UV luminosity and slope of the UV continuum beta. The IR to UV luminosity ratio is roughly constant over most of the UV luminosity range we explore. We also find that the IR to UV luminosity ratio is correlated with beta. We observe a correlation that underestimates the correlation derived from low-redshift starburst galaxies, but is in good agreement with the correlation derived from local normal star-forming galaxies. Using these results we reconstruct the IR luminosity function of our UV-selected sample. This luminosity function recovers the IR luminosity functions…
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