The complex physics of dusty star-forming galaxies at high redshifts as revealed by Herschel and Spitzer
B. Lo Faro, A. Franceschini, M. Vaccari, L. Silva, G. Rodighiero, S., Berta, J. Bock, D. Burgarella, V. Buat, A. Cava, D.L. Clements, A. Cooray, D., Farrah, A. Feltre, E.A. Gonz\'alez Solares, P. Hurley, D. Lutz, G. Magdis, B., Magnelli, L. Marchetti, S.J. Oliver, M.J. Page

TL;DR
This study combines Herschel and Spitzer data to analyze high-redshift dusty star-forming galaxies, revealing their complex star formation histories, significant old stellar populations, and discrepancies with optical-only models, highlighting the importance of infrared data.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent physical model to better understand the stellar populations and dust effects in high-redshift (U)LIRGs, improving upon optical-only SED fitting methods.
Findings
Most galaxies have old (>1 Gyr) stellar populations.
Star formation rates are moderate (<100 M_sun/yr).
Significant dust obscuration affects mass and extinction estimates.
Abstract
We combine far-infrared photometry from Herschel (PEP/HERMES) with deep mid-infrared spectroscopy from Spitzer to investigate the nature and the mass assembly history of a sample of 31 Luminous and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies at z~1 and 2 selected in GOODS-S with 24 m fluxes between 0.2 and 0.5 mJy. We model the data with a self-consistent physical model (GRASIL) which includes a state-of-the-art treatment of dust extinction and reprocessing. We find that all of our galaxies appear to require massive populations of old (>1 Gyr) stars and, at the same time, to host a moderate ongoing activity of SF (SFR < 100 M/yr). The bulk of the stars appear to have been formed a few Gyr before the observation in essentially all cases. Only five galaxies of the sample require a recent starburst superimposed on a quiescent star formation history (SFH). We also find discrepancies…
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