The ALMA Frontier Fields Survey. VI. Lensing-corrected 1.1mm number counts in Abell 2744, MACSJ0416.1-2403, MACSJ1149.5+2223, Abell 370 and Abell S1063
A. M. Mu\~noz Arancibia, J. Gonz\'alez-L\'opez, E. Ibar, F. E. Bauer,, T. Anguita, M. Aravena, R. Demarco, R. Kneissl, A. M. Koekemoer, P., Troncoso-Iribarren, and A. Zitrin

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of five galaxy clusters to measure 1.1mm number counts of faint dusty galaxies, revealing a flattening trend at fluxes below 0.1 mJy and suggesting most of the extragalactic background light at this wavelength is resolved.
Contribution
First measurement of 1.1mm number counts down to 0.01 mJy using lensing, confirming flattening and providing insights into the infrared luminosity function at high redshift.
Findings
Number counts flatten below 0.1 mJy.
Most of the EBL at 1.1mm may be resolved.
Results are consistent with galaxy evolution models.
Abstract
[abridged] Probing the faint end of the number counts at mm wavelengths is important to identify the origin of the extragalactic background light in this regime. Aided by strong gravitational lensing, ALMA observations towards massive galaxy clusters have opened a window to disentangle this origin, allowing to resolve sub-mJy dusty star-forming galaxies. We aim to derive number counts at 1.1 mm down to flux densities fainter than 0.1 mJy, based on ALMA observations towards five Hubble Frontier Fields (FF) galaxy clusters, following a statistical approach to correct for lensing effects. We created a source catalog that includes 29 ALMA 1.1 mm continuum detections down to a 4.5sigma significance. We derived source intrinsic flux densities using public lensing models. We folded the uncertainties in both magnifications and source redshifts into the number counts through Monte Carlo…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
