The space density of luminous dusty star-forming galaxies at $z>4$: SCUBA-2 and LABOCA imaging of ultrared galaxies from $Herschel$-ATLAS
R. J. Ivison (ESO, IfA, Edinburgh), A. J. R. Lewis, A. Weiss, V., Arumugam, J. M. Simpson, W. S. Holland, S. Maddox, L. Dunne, E. Valiante, P., van der Werf, A. Omont, H. Dannerbauer, Ian Smail, F. Bertoldi, M. Bremer, R., S. Bussmann, Z.-Y. Cai, D. L. Clements, A. Cooray

TL;DR
This study significantly increases the known population of luminous dusty star-forming galaxies at redshifts greater than 4, using Herschel-ATLAS data and ground-based photometry to better constrain their properties and space density.
Contribution
It presents a new method combining Herschel and ground-based data to identify and characterize high-redshift DSFGs, estimating their space density and luminosity.
Findings
Median redshift of 3.66 for ultrared galaxies
Approximately one-third of the sample at z>4
Estimated space density of 6 x 10^-7 Mpc^-3
Abstract
Until recently, only a handful of dusty, star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) were known at , most of them significantly amplified by gravitational lensing. Here, we have increased the number of such DSFGs substantially, selecting galaxies from the uniquely wide 250-, 350- and 500-m Herschel-ATLAS imaging survey on the basis of their extremely red far-infrared colors and faint 350- and 500-m flux densities - ergo they are expected to be largely unlensed, luminous, rare and very distant. The addition of ground-based continuum photometry at longer wavelengths from the JCMT and APEX allows us to identify the dust peak in their SEDs, better constraining their redshifts. We select the SED templates best able to determine photometric redshifts using a sample of 69 high-redshift, lensed DSFGs, then perform checks to assess the impact of the CMB on our technique, and to quantify the…
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