Luminosity Functions of Local Infrared Galaxies with AKARI: Implications to the Cosmic Star Formation History and AGN Evolution

Abstract

Infrared (IR) luminosity is fundamental to understanding the cosmic star formation history and AGN evolution. The AKARI IR space telescope performed all sky survey in 6 IR bands (9, 18, 65, 90, 140, and 160um) with 3-10 times better sensitivity than IRAS, covering the crucial far-IR wavelengths across the peak of the dust emission. Combined with a better spatial resolution, AKARI can much more precisely measure the total infrared luminosity (LTIR) of individual galaxies, and thus, the total infrared luminosity density in the local Universe. By fitting IR SED models, we have re-measured LTIR of the IRAS Revised Bright Galaxy Sample. We present mid-IR monochromatic luminosity to LTIR conversions for Spitzer 8,24um, AKARI 9,18um, IRAS 12um, WISE 12,22um, and ISO 15um filters, with scatter ranging 13-44%. The resulting AKARI IR luminosity function (LF) agrees well with that from the IRAS. We integrate the LF weighted by LTIR to obtain a cosmic IR luminosity density of OmegaTIR= (8.5+1.5-2.3)x 107 L Mpc-3, of which 7+-1% is produced by LIRGs, and only 0.4+-0.1% is from ULIRGs in the local Universe. Once IR contributions from AGN and star-forming galaxies (SFG) are separated, SFG IR LF shows a steep decline at the bright-end. Compared with high-redshift results from the AKARI NEP deep survey, these data show a strong evolution of OmegaTIRSF propto (1+z)4.0+-0.5, and OmegaTIRAGN propto (1+z)4.4+-0.4. For OmegaTIRAGN, the ULIRG contribution exceeds that from LIRG already by z~1. A rapid evolution in both OmegaTIRAGN and OmegaTIRSFG suggests the correlation between star formation and black hole accretion rate continues up to higher redshifts. We compare the evolution of OmegaTIRAGN to that of X-ray luminosity density. The OmegaTIRAGN/OmegaX-rayAGN ratio shows a possible increase at z>1, suggesting an increase of obscured AGN at z>1.

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