High-resolution SMA imaging of bright submillimetre sources from the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey
Ryley Hill, Scott C. Chapman, Douglas Scott, Glen Petitpas, Ian Smail,, Edward L. Chapin, Mark A. Gurwell, Ryan Perry, Andrew W. Blain, Malcolm N., Bremer, Chian-Chou Chen, James S. Dunlop, Duncan Farrah, Giovanni G. Fazio,, James E. Geach, Paul Howson, R. J. Ivison

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution SMA imaging to analyze bright submillimetre sources from the SCUBA-2 survey, providing detailed source counts, galaxy multiplicity estimates, and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First high-resolution interferometric follow-up of bright SCUBA-2 sources, refining number counts and assessing galaxy multiplicity and evolution.
Findings
Number counts are consistent with previous surveys but slightly lower.
Approximately 15% chance of multiple galaxies blending into single sources.
Estimated volume density of ultra-luminous starburst galaxies at z=2-3.
Abstract
We have used the Submillimeter Array at 860m to observe the brightest SCUBA-2 sources in 4deg of the Cosmology Legacy Survey. We have targeted 75 of the brightest single-dish SCUBA-2 850m sources down to mJy, achieving an average synthesized beam of 2.4 and an average rms of mJy in our primary beam-corrected maps. We searched our maps for peaks, corresponding to mJy sources, and detected 59 single galaxies and three pairs of galaxies. We include in our study 28 archival observations, bringing our sample size to 103 bright single-dish submillimetre sources with interferometric follow-up. We compute the cumulative and differential number counts of our sample, finding them to overlap with previous single-dish survey number counts within the uncertainties, although…
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