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Published November 2006 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

The SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey – II. Submillimetre maps, catalogue and number counts

Abstract

We present maps, source catalogue and number counts of the largest, most complete and unbiased extragalactic submillimetre survey: the 850-μm SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES). Using the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), SHADES mapped two separate regions of sky: the Subaru/XMM–Newton Deep Field (SXDF) and the Lockman Hole East (LH). Encompassing 93 per cent of the overall acquired data (i.e. data taken up to 2004 February 1), these SCUBA maps cover 720 arcmin² with a rms noise level of about 2 mJy and have uncovered >100 submillimetre galaxies. In order to ensure the utmost robustness of the resulting source catalogue, data reduction was independently carried out by four subgroups within the SHADES team, providing an unprecedented degree of reliability with respect to other SCUBA catalogues available from the literature. Individual source lists from the four groups were combined to produce a robust 120-object SHADES catalogue; an invaluable resource for follow-up campaigns aiming to study the properties of a complete and consistent sample of submillimetre galaxies. For the first time, we present deboosted flux densities for each submillimetre galaxy found in a large survey. Extensive simulations and tests were performed separately by each group in order to confirm the robustness of the source candidates and to evaluate the effects of false detections, completeness and flux density boosting. Corrections for these effects were then applied to the data to derive the submillimetre galaxy source counts. SHADES has a high enough number of detected sources that meaningful differential counts can be estimated, unlike most submillimetre surveys which have to consider integral counts. We present differential and integral source number counts and find that the differential counts are better fit with a broken power law or a Schechter function than with a single power law; the SHADES data alone significantly show that a break is required at several mJy, although the precise position of the break is not well constrained. We also find that a 850-μm survey complete down to 2 mJy would resolve 20–30 per cent of the far-infrared background into point sources.

Additional Information

© 2006 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2006 RAS. Accepted 2006 August 17. Received 2006 August 16; in original form 2006 May 30. Article first published online: 27 Sep 2006. We thank an anonymous referee for helpful comments and suggestions which improved the paper. We also thank Jasper Wall for useful discussions on bootstrapping and model fitting to correlated data. The SHADES consortium would like to acknowledge the following people, who are not members of SHADES, for help with the SHADES observations: numerous JAC staff members, Alex van Engelen and Payam Davoodi. The paper working group acknowledges support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council of the United Kingdom (PPARC) and partial support throughCONACYT grants 39953-F and 39548-F. The JCMT is operated on behalf of the PPARC, the Netherlands rganisation for Scientific Research and the National Research Council of Canada.

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Published - COPmnras06.pdf

Accepted Version - 0609039.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023