Herschel Observations of Far-Infrared Cooling Lines in intermediate Redshift (Ultra)-luminous Infrared Galaxies

We report the first results from a spectroscopic survey of the [CII] 158um line from a sample of intermediate redshift (0.2<z<0.8) (lir="" (u)lirgs="" (ultra)-luminous="" galaxies,="" infrared="">10^11.5 Lsun), using the SPIRE-Fourier Transf...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rigopoulou, D, Hopwood, R, Magdis, G, Thatte, N, Swinyard, B, Farrah, D, Huang, J, Alonso-Herrero, A, Bock, J, Clements, D, Cooray, A, Griffin, M, Oliver, S, Pearson, C, Riechers, D, Scott, D, Smith, A, Vaccari, M, Valtchanov, I, Wang, L
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2014
Description
Summary:We report the first results from a spectroscopic survey of the [CII] 158um line from a sample of intermediate redshift (0.2<z<0.8) (lir="" (u)lirgs="" (ultra)-luminous="" galaxies,="" infrared="">10^11.5 Lsun), using the SPIRE-Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) on board the Herschel Space Observatory. This is the first survey of [CII] emission, an important tracer of star-formation, at a redshift range where the star-formation rate density of the Universe increases rapidly. We detect strong [CII] 158um line emission from over 80% of the sample. We find that the [CII] line is luminous, in the range (0.8-4)x10^(-3) of the far-infrared continuum luminosity of our sources, and appears to arise from photodissociation regions on the surface of molecular clouds. The L[CII]/LIR ratio in our intermediate redshift (U)LIRGs is on average ~10 times larger than that of local ULIRGs. Furthermore, we find that the L[CII]/LIR and L[CII]/LCO(1-0) ratios in our sample are similar to those of local normal galaxies and high-z star-forming galaxies. ULIRGs at z~0.5 show many similarities to the properties of local normal and high-z star forming galaxies. Our findings strongly suggest that rapid evolution in the properties of the star forming regions of luminous infrared galaxies is likely to have occurred in the last 5 billion years.</z<0.8)>