Unveiling Dust-enshrouded Star Formation in the Early Universe: a Sub-mm Survey of the Hubble Deep Field
David Hughes (1), Steve Serjeant (2), James Dunlop (1), Michael, Rowan-Robinson (2), Andrew Blain (3), Robert G. Mann (2), Rob Ivison (1 and, 4), John Peacock (1), Andreas Efstathiou (2), Walter Gear (5), Seb Oliver, (2), Andy Lawrence (1), Malcolm Longair (3)

TL;DR
This paper presents the deepest sub-millimeter survey of the Hubble Deep Field, revealing dust-enshrouded star formation activity at high redshifts and challenging no-evolution models of galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides new deep sub-mm observations identifying high-redshift starburst galaxies and quantifies their contribution to cosmic star formation history.
Findings
Detection of 5 robust sub-mm sources at z~3
Significant contribution of these sources to the sub-mm background
Star formation density at 2<z<4 is at least five times higher than UV-based estimates
Abstract
The advent of sensitive sub-mm array cameras now allows a proper census of dust-enshrouded massive star-formation in very distant galaxies, previously hidden activity to which even the faintest optical images are insensitive. We present the deepest sub-mm survey of the sky to date, taken with the SCUBA camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope and centred on the Hubble Deep Field. The high source density found in this image implies that the survey is confusion-limited below a flux density of 2 mJy. However, within the central 80 arcsec radius independent analyses yield 5 reproducible sources with S(850um) > 2 mJy which simulations indicate can be ascribed to individual galaxies. We give positions and flux densities for these, and furthermore show using multi-frequency photometric data that the brightest sources in our map lie at redshifts z~3. These results lead to integral source…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
