HerMES: The Contribution to the Cosmic Infrared Background from Galaxies Selected by Mass and Redshift
M. P. Viero, L. Moncelsi, R. F. Quadri, V. Arumugam, R. J. Assef, M., Bethermin, J. Bock, C. Bridge, A. Conley, A. Cooray, D. Farrah, S. Heinis, S., Ikarashi, R. J. Ivison, K. Kohno, G. Marsden, S. J. Oliver, I. G. Roseboom,, B. Schulz, D. Scott, P. Serra, M. Vaccari

TL;DR
This study quantifies the contribution of different galaxy populations to the cosmic infrared background across multiple wavelengths, revealing the dominant galaxy types and redshift ranges responsible for the background light.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of the galaxy contributions to the CIB split by mass, redshift, and galaxy type using stacking techniques on a large K-selected galaxy sample.
Findings
Approximately 69-80% of the CIB is resolved at various wavelengths.
Star-forming galaxies account for about 95% of the CIB.
The dominant contributors shift from normal galaxies to LIRGs and ULIRGs with increasing wavelength.
Abstract
We quantify the fraction of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) that originates from galaxies identified in the UV/optical/near-infrared by stacking 81,250 (~35.7 arcmin^2) K-selected sources (K_AB < 24.0), split according to their rest-frame U - V vs. V - J colors into 72,216 star-forming and 9,034 quiescent galaxies, on maps from Spitzer/MIPS (24um), Herschel/SPIRE (250, 350, 500um), Herschel/PACS (100, 160um), and AzTEC (1100um). The fraction of the CIB resolved by our catalog is (69 15)% at 24um, (78 17)% at 70um, (58 13)% at 100um, (78 18)% at 160um, (80 17)% at 250um, (69 14)% at 350um, (65 12)% at 500um, and (45 8)% at 1100um. Of that total, about 95% originates from star-forming galaxies, while the remaining 5% is from apparently quiescent galaxies. The CIB at < 200um is sourced predominantly from galaxies at z < 1,…
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