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  • An ALMA Survey of the SCUBA...
    Stach, Stuart M.; Smail, Ian; Swinbank, A. M.; Simpson, J. M.; Geach, J. E.; An, Fang Xia; Almaini, Omar; Arumugam, Vinodiran; Blain, A. W.; Chapman, S. C.; Chen, Chian-Chou; Conselice, C. J.; Cooke, E. A.; Coppin, K. E. K.; Dunlop, J. S.; Farrah, Duncan; Gullberg, B.; Hartley, W.; Ivison, R. J.; Maltby, D. T.; Micha owski, M. J.; Scott, Douglas; Simpson, Chris; Thomson, A. P.; Wardlow, J. L.; Werf, P. van der

    The Astrophysical journal, 06/2018, Volume: 860, Issue: 2
    Journal Article

    We report the first results of AS2UDS, an 870 m continuum survey with the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) of a total area of ∼50 arcmin2 comprising a complete sample of 716 submillimeter sources drawn from the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey (S2CLS) map of the UKIDSS/UDS field. The S2CLS parent sample covers a 0.96 degree2 field at 850 = 0.90 0.05 mJy beam−1. Our deep, high-resolution ALMA observations with 870 ∼ 0.25 mJy and a 0 15-0 30 FWHM synthesized beam, provide precise locations for 695 submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) responsible for the submillimeter emission corresponding to 606 sources in the low-resolution, single-dish map. We measure the number counts of SMGs brighter than S870 ≥ 4 mJy, free from the effects of blending and show that the normalization of the counts falls by 28% 2% in comparison with the SCUBA-2 published counts, but that the shape remains unchanged. We determine that 44 − 14 + 16 % of the brighter single-dish sources with S850 ≥ 9 mJy consist of a blend of two or more ALMA-detectable SMGs brighter than S870 ∼ 1 mJy (corresponding to a galaxy with a total-infrared luminosity of LIR 1012 L ), in comparison with 28% 2% for the single-dish sources at S850 ≥ 5 mJy. Using the 46 single-dish submillimeter sources that contain two or more ALMA-detected SMGs with photometric redshifts, we show that there is a significant statistical excess of pairs of SMGs with similar redshifts (<1% probability of occurring by chance), suggesting that at least 30% of these blends arise from physically associated pairs of SMGs.