The SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey: Multi-wavelengths counterparts to 10$^3$ submillimeter galaxies in the UKIDSS-UDS field
Chian-Chou Chen (1,2), Ian Smail (1,2), Rob J. Ivison (3,4), Vinodiran, Arumugam (3,4), Omar Almaini (5), Christopher J. Conselice (5), James E., Geach (6), Will G. Hartley (5,7), Cheng-Jiun Ma (1,2), Alice Mortlock (5,3),, Chris Simpson (8), James M. Simpson (1,2)

TL;DR
This study develops a new multiwavelength identification technique for submillimeter galaxy counterparts, achieving high accuracy and completeness, and analyzes their redshift distribution, clustering, and far-infrared properties in the UKIDSS-UDS field.
Contribution
The paper introduces the Optical-IR Triple Color (OIRTC) method for identifying SMG counterparts, improving upon traditional techniques in accuracy and completeness.
Findings
Identified counterparts for 80% of the SCUBA-2 sources.
Median redshift of SMGs is approximately 2.3 to 2.6.
Multiple counterparts are likely for over 40% of bright SMGs.
Abstract
We present multiwavelength identifications for the counterparts of 1088 submillimeter sources detected at 850m in the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey study of the UKIDSS-UDS field. By utilising an ALMA pilot study on a subset of our bright SCUBA-2 sample as a training set, along with the deep optical-near-infrared data available in this field, we develop a novel technique, Optical-IR Triple Color (OIRTC), using , , colors to select the candidate submillimeter galaxy (SMG) counterparts. By combining radio identification and the OIRTC technique, we find counterpart candidates for 80% of the Class = 1 SCUBA-2 sample, defined as those that are covered by both radio and OIR imaging and the base sample for our scientific analyses. Based on the ALMA training set, we expect the accuracy of these identifications to be %, with a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
