The First Detections of the Extragalactic Background Light at 3000, 5500, and 8000A (III): Cosmological Implications
Abstract
(Abridged) We have used HST WFPC2 and ground-based spectroscopy to measure the integrated extragalactic background light (EBL) at optical wavelengths. We have also computed the integrated light from individual galaxy counts in the images used to measure the EBL and in the Hubble Deep Field. We find that the flux in galaxies as measured by standard galaxy photometry methods has generally been underestimated by about 50%. Further, we find that the total flux in individually detected galaxies is a factor of 2 to 3 less than the EBL at 3000--8000A. We show that a significant fraction of the EBL may come from normal galaxies at z<4, which are simply undetectable as a result of K-corrections and cosmological surface brightness dimming. This is consistent with recent redshift surveys at z<4. In the context of some simple models, we discuss the constraints placed by the EBL on the evolution of the luminosity density at z>1. Based on our optical EBL and published UV and IR EBL measurements, we estimate that the total EBL from 0.1--1000 microns is 100+/-20 nW/m2/sr. If the total EBL were produced entirely by stellar nucleosynthesis, then we estimate that the total baryonic mass processed through stars is Omega* = 0.0062 (+/- 0.0022) h-2, which corresponds to 0.33+/-0.12 OmegaB for currently favored values of the baryon density. This estimate is smaller by roughly 7% if 7 h0.7 nW/m2/sr of the total EBL comes from accretion onto central black holes. This estimate of Omega* suggests that the universe has been enriched to a total metal mass of 0.21(+/-0.13) Zsun OmegaB. Our estimate is consistent with other measurements of the cumulative metal mass fraction of stars, stellar remnants, and the intracluster medium of galaxy clusters in the local universe.
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