HerMES: Current Cosmic Infrared Background Estimates Can be Explained by Known Galaxies and their Faint Companions at z < 4
M. P. Viero, L. Moncelsi, R. F. Quadri, M. B\'ethermin, J. J. Bock, D., Burgarella, S. C. Chapman, D. L. Clements, A. Conley, L. Conversi, S., Duivenvoorden, J. S. Dunlop, D. Farrah, A. Franceschini, M. Halpern, R. J., Ivison, G. Lagache, G. Magdis, L. Marchetti

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the cosmic infrared background can be largely explained by known galaxies and their faint companions at redshifts below 4, using a novel stacking method on Herschel survey data.
Contribution
It introduces a new image smoothing stacking technique to account for faint, undetected sources and models galaxy contributions to the CIB, challenging the need for diffuse emission explanations.
Findings
Faint galaxy companions significantly contribute to the CIB.
Smoothing increases the measured CIB, capturing faint source contributions.
Galaxies with stellar mass > 10^8.5 Msun can explain most of the CIB.
Abstract
We report contributions to cosmic infrared background (CIB) intensities originating from known galaxies and their faint companions at submillimeter wavelengths. Using the publicly-available UltraVISTA catalog, and maps at 250, 350, and 500 {\mu}m from the \emph{Herschel} Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES), we perform a novel measurement that exploits the fact that uncatalogued sources may bias stacked flux densities --- particularly if the resolution of the image is poor --- and intentionally smooth the images before stacking and summing intensities. By smoothing the maps we are capturing the contribution of faint (undetected in K_S ~ 23.4) sources that are physically associated, or correlated, with the detected sources. We find that the cumulative CIB increases with increased smoothing, reaching 9.82 +- 0.78, 5.77 +- 0.43, and 2.32 +- 0.19 at 250, 350,…
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