A&A 465, 125-128 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066714
Dissecting the cosmic infrared background with 3D instruments
D. L. Clements1, K. G. Isaak2, S. C. Madden3, and C. Pearson4, 51 Astrophysics Group, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BW, UK
e-mail: d.clements@imperial.ac.uk
2 School of Physics and Astronomy, Cardiff University, The Parade, Cardiff CF24 3AA, UK
e-mail: kate.isaak@astro.cf.ac.uk
3 Service d'Astrophysique, Bât. 609, Orme des Merisers, CEA Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
e-mail: madden@cea.fr
4 Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Yoshinodai 3-1-1, Sagamihara, Kanagawa 229-8510, Japan
e-mail: cpp@ir.isas.jaxa.jp
5 ISO Data Centre, European Space Agency, Villafranca del Castillo, PO Box 50727, 28080 Madrid, Spain
(Received 8 November 2006 / Accepted 21 December 2006)
Abstract
Context.The cosmic infrared background (CIB) consists of
emission from distant, dusty, star-forming galaxies. Energetically, the CIB is very important as it contains as much energy as the extragalactic optical background. The nature and
evolutionary status of the objects making up the background are,
however, unclear.
Aims.The CIB peaks at ~150
m, and as such is most effectively studied from space. The
limited apertures of space-borne telescopes set the angular
resolution that can be attained, and so even Herschel, with its 3.5 m
diameter, will be confusion-limited at this wavelength at
~5 mJy. The bulk of the
galaxies contributing to the CIB are fainter than this, so it is difficult to study them without
interferometry. Here we
present the results of a preliminary study of an alternative way of probing fainter than the continuum confusion limit using far-IR imaging spectroscopy. An instrument capable of such observations is being planned for SPICA - a proposed Japanese mission with an aperture equivalent
to that of Herschel and more than 2 orders of magnitude more sensitive.
Methods.In this paper we investigate the potential of imaging spectrometers to break the continuum confusion limit. We have simulated the capabilities of a spectrometer with modest field of view (2![]()
2
), moderate spectral resolution (
1-2000) and high sensitivity.
Results.We find that such an instrument is capable of not only detecting line
emission from sources with continuum fluxes substantially below the
confusion limit, but also of determining their redshifts and, where
multiple lines are detected, some emission line diagnostics.
Conclusions.3-D imaging spectrometers on cooled far-IR space telescopes will
be powerful new tools for extragalactic far-IR astronomy.
Key words: galaxies: high-redshift -- infrared: galaxies -- galaxies: starburst -- instrumentation: spectrographs -- space vehicles: instruments
© ESO 2007
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