Tracing the evolution of dust-obscured activity using sub-millimetre galaxy populations from STUDIES and AS2UDS
U. Dudzevi\v{c}i\=ut\.e, I. Smail, A. M. Swinbank, C.-F. Lim, W.-H., Wang, J. M. Simpson, Y. Ao, S. C. Chapman, C.-C. Chen, D. Clements, H., Dannerbauer, L. C. Ho, H. S. Hwang, M. Koprowski, C.-H. Lee, D. Scott, H., Shim, R. Shirley, Y. Toba

TL;DR
This study compares the physical properties of sub-millimetre galaxies from two surveys, revealing how dust-obscured star formation evolves over cosmic time and the differences between galaxy populations at various redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of 450-$ m $m and 850-$ m $m selected SMGs, highlighting their evolutionary trends and physical differences across redshifts.
Findings
450-$ m $m SMGs have higher space density at $z \u2264 2$
Higher-redshift sources exhibit higher dust densities and attenuation
Dust content evolution is influenced by gas content and dust destruction timescales
Abstract
We analyse the physical properties of 121 SNR 5 sub-millimetre galaxies (SMGs) from the STUDIES 450-m survey. We model their UV-to-radio spectral energy distributions using MAGPHYS+photo- and compare the results to similar modelling of 850-m-selected SMG sample from AS2UDS, to understand the fundamental physical differences between the two populations at the observed depths. The redshift distribution of the 450-m sample has a median of = 1.85 0.12 and can be described by strong evolution of the far-infrared luminosity function. The fainter 450-m sample has 14 times higher space density than the brighter 850-m sample at 2, and a comparable space density at = 2-3, before rapidly declining, suggesting LIRGs are the main obscured population at 1-2, while ULIRGs dominate at higher redshifts. We construct…
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