Far infrared constraints on the contamination by dust obscured galaxies of high-z dropout searches

Abstract

The spectral energy distributions (SED) of dusty galaxies at intermediate redshift may look similar to very high redshift galaxies in the optical/near infrared (NIR) domain. This can lead to the contamination of high redshift galaxy searches based on broad band optical/NIR photometry by lower redshift dusty galaxies as both kind of galaxies cannot be distinguished. The contamination rate could be as high as 50%. This work shows how the far infrared (FIR) domain can help to recognize likely low-z interlopers in an optical/NIR search for high-z galaxies. We analyse the FIR SEDs of two galaxies proposed as very high redshift (z>7) dropout candidates based on deep Hawk-I/VLT observations. The FIR SEDs are sampled with PACS/Herschel at 100 and 160\,μm, with SPIRE/Herschel at 250, 350 and 500\,μm and with LABOCA/APEX at 870\,μm. We find that redshifts >7 would imply extreme FIR SEDs (with dust temperatures >100\,K and FIR luminosities >1013\,L). At z2, instead, the SEDs of both sources would be compatible with that of typical ULIRGs/SMGs. Considering all the data available for these sources from visible to FIR we re-estimate the redshifts and we find z1.6--2.5. Due to the strong spectral breaks observed in these galaxies, standard templates from the literature fail to reproduce the visible-near IR part of the SEDs even when additional extinction is included. These sources resemble strongly dust obscured galaxies selected in Spitzer observations with extreme visible-to-FIR colors, and the galaxy GN10 at z=4. Galaxies with similar SEDs could contaminate other high redshift surveys.

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