# The IRAM/GISMO two-millimeter survey in the COSMOS field

**Authors:** B. Magnelli, A. Karim, J. Staguhn, A. Kov\'acs, E. F., Jim\'enez-Andrade, C. M. Casey, J. A. Zavala, E. Schinnerer, M. Sargent, M., Aravena, F. Bertoldi, P. L. Capak, D. A. Riechers, D. J. Benford

arXiv: 1904.10006 · 2019-05-29

## TL;DR

This paper presents the deepest 2mm continuum survey in the COSMOS field, detecting high-redshift, star-forming galaxies and constraining galaxy evolution models, highlighting the effectiveness of 2mm surveys in selecting massive, high-z galaxies.

## Contribution

It provides the widest deep 2mm survey to date, identifies high-redshift galaxies, and compares observations with galaxy evolution models, emphasizing the role of 2mm surveys in high-z galaxy selection.

## Key findings

- Detected four high-significance sources with low false detection probability.
- Most detected galaxies are at redshifts above 3, with high star formation rates.
- Survey results align with most galaxy evolution models, except those predicting many dusty galaxies at z>7.

## Abstract

We present deep continuum observations at a wavelength of 2mm centered on the COSMOS field using the Goddard IRAM Superconducting Millimeter Observer (GISMO) at the IRAM 30m-telescope. These data constitute the widest deep 2mm survey to-date, reaching a uniform $\sigma\sim0.23$mJy beam$^{-1}$ sensitivity over $\sim250$arcmin$^2$ at $\sim\,24''$ resolution. We detect four sources at high significance (S/N$\,\geq\,$4.4) with an expected number of false detection of 0.09 sources, and five sources at $4.4>\,$S/N$\,\geq\,3.7$ with an expected number of false detection of 1.65 sources. Combined with deep GISMO observations in GOODS-N, we constrain the 2mm number counts over one decade in flux density. These measurements agree with most galaxy evolution models tested here, except those with large population of dusty star-forming galaxies at $z>7$. Five GISMO sources have counterparts in (sub-)millimeter catalogs available in COSMOS. Their redshifts suggest that all but one lie above $z\sim3$. These four high-redshift ($z>3$) galaxies have $\tilde{z}=3.9$, SFRs $\sim\,$400 - 1200M$_{\odot}\,$yr$^{-1}$ and $M_{\rm dust}\sim10^{9.5}\,$M$_{\odot}$. They provide a relatively complete selection ($\sim66\%$) of the most luminous ($L_{\rm IR}>10^{12.6}\,$L$_{\odot}$) and highest redshift ($z>3$) galaxies detected within our survey area by AzTEC at 1.1mm. We thus conclude that 2mm surveys favor the selection of massive, vigorously star-forming, high-redshift galaxies. This is corroborated by GISMO-C4, a source with a low false detection probability ($\sim\,6.2\%$), for which the absence of a (sub-)millimeter counterpart supports a high redshift origin ($z\gtrsim3$).

## Full text

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## Figures

40 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.10006/full.md

## References

81 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.10006/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.10006