HerMES: A Statistical Measurement of the Redshift Distribution of Herschel-SPIRE Sources Using the Cross-correlation Technique
Abstract
The wide-area imaging surveys with the Herschel Space Observatory at sub-mm wavelengths have now resulted in catalogs of order one hundred thousand dusty, star-burst galaxies. We make a statistical estimate of N(z) using a clustering analysis of sub-mm galaxies detected at each of 250, 350 and 500 μm from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) centered on the Bo\"otes field. We cross-correlate Herschel galaxies against galaxy samples at optical and near-IR wavelengths from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), the NOAO Deep Wide Field Survey (NDWFS) and the Spitzer Deep Wide Field Survey (SDWFS). We create optical and near-IR galaxy samples based on their photometric or spectroscopic redshift distributions and test the accuracy of those redshift distributions with similar galaxy samples defined with catalogs of the Cosmological Evolution Survey (COSMOS), as the COSMOS field has superior spectroscopy coverage. We model-fit the clustering auto and cross-correlations of Herschel and optical/IR galaxy samples to estimate N(z) and clustering bias factors. The S350 > 20 mJy galaxies have a bias factor varying with redshift as b(z)=1.0+1.0-0.5(1+z)1.2+0.3-0.7. This bias and the redshift dependence is broadly in agreement with galaxies that occupy dark matter halos of mass in the range of 1012 to 1013 M. We find that the redshift distribution peaks around z 0.5 to 1 for galaxies selected at 250 μm with an average redshift of < z > = 1.8 0.2. For 350 and 500 μm-selected SPIRE samples the peak shifts to higher redshift, but the average redshift remains the same with a value of 1.9 0.2.
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