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The nature of the mid-infrared population from optical identifications of the ELAIS-S1 sample

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 23:25 authored by F La Franca, C Gruppioni, I Matute, F Pozzi, C Lari, M Mignoli, G Zamorani, D M Alexander, F Cocchia, L Danese, A Franceschini, P Héraudeau, J-K Kotilainen, M J D Linden-Vørnle, Seb OliverSeb Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson, S Serjeant, L Spinoglio, A Verma
We present a multiwavelength catalog (15 µm, R-band, K-band, and 1.4 GHz flux) plus spectroscopic identifications for 406 15 µm sources detected in the European Large Area ISO Survey (ELAIS) region S1, over the flux density range 0.5 < S15µm < 150 mJy. Three hundred thirty-two (~82%) sources are optically identified down to R ~ 23.0. Spectra or bona fide stellar identifications are obtained for 290 objects (~88% of the optically identified sources). The areal coverage, mid-infrared (MIR) and optical completeness of the sample are discussed in order to allow statistical and evolutionary analyses. Two main spectroscopic classes have been found to dominate the MIR extragalactic population: z < 0.5 star-forming galaxies [from absorbed to extreme starbursts: ?L?(15 µm) ˜ 108–1011 L?], which account for ~75% of the sources, and active galactic nuclei (AGNs; both type 1 and 2), which account for ~25% of the sources. About 20% of the extragalactic sources are dust-enshrouded starburst galaxies [e(a) spectra], and all the starburst galaxies appear more dust-extincted in the optical than nearby normal galaxies. We also identified 91 stellar objects (~22% of the MIR sources). The counts for starburst galaxies and AGNs down to 0.6 mJy have been derived. A general trend is found in the optical-MIR spectral energy distribution of the galaxies, where the MIR-luminous objects have larger MIR to optical luminosity ratios. Based on a variety of analyses, we suggest that the ELAIS sources fainter than R ~ 23 are luminous and ultraluminous MIR galaxies (LIG-ULIGs; ?L?(15 µm) = 1011–1012 L?) at intermediate redshifts (z = 0.5–1.5), and that consequently the present sample is virtually 100% spectroscopically complete up to z = 0.5.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Astronomical Journal

ISSN

0004-637X

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Issue

6

Volume

127

Page range

3075

Department affiliated with

  • Physics and Astronomy Publications

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-02-06

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