The Nature of Hyperluminous Infrared Galaxies
F. Gao, L. Wang, A. Efstathiou, K. Ma{\l}ek, P. N. Best, M. Bonato, D., Farrah, R. Kondapally, I. McCheyne, and H. J. A. R\"ottgering

TL;DR
This study analyzes the physical properties of 526 hyperluminous infrared galaxies using multi-wavelength data and compares different spectral energy distribution fitting methods to understand their contribution to cosmic star formation and black hole growth.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of SED fitting codes and models, revealing the impact of methodological choices on derived galaxy properties and cosmic evolution insights.
Findings
HLIRGs are ultra-massive with stellar masses > 10^11 M_sun
Higher space density of ultra-massive galaxies than previous estimates
HLIRGs' contribution to cosmic SFR density increases with redshift
Abstract
We make use of multi-wavelength data of a large hyperluminous infrared (HLIRG) sample to derive their main physical properties, e.g., stellar mass, star-formation rate (SFR), volume density, contribution to the cosmic stellar mass density and to the cosmic SFR density. We also study the black hole (BH) growth rate and its relationship with the SFR of the host galaxy. We select 526 HLIRGs in three deep fields (Botes, Lockman-Hole, ELAIS-N1) and adopt two spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting codes, CIGALE, which assumes energy balance, and CYGNUS, which is based on radiative transfer models and does not adopt energy balance principle. We use two different active galactic nucleus (AGN) models in CIGALE and three AGN models in CYGNUS to compare the results estimated using different SED fitting codes and different AGN models. The stellar mass, total IR luminosity and AGN…
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