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Tuesday, November 23rd at 2.00pm @ the JAC

  Douglas Scott

University of British Columbia

Dusty Corners of the Universe

  ABSTRACT:The sub-mm waveband has opened up for cosmology, and through this window we can hope to glimpse some answers to a number of related puzzles: What are the brightest sub-mm galaxies? What sorts of galaxies make up the Far-IR Background? When did the Universe form the bulk of its stars? How important is dust obscuration for obtaining a full star-formation census?

I will describe some results from observations using the SCUBA instrument on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. Our group has obtained counts of sources through cluster lenses, has targetted specific objects such as Lyman-break galaxies and sources discovered by ISO, and has made a carefully cosntructed "Super-map" of the Hubble Deep Field North region (a.k.a. GOODS-N). This field has the most SCUBA data of any part of the sky, as well as the deepest available data at almost all other wavebands. We therefore have the most complete census of the multiwavelength properties of this sample of about 40 sub-mm sources.


Contact: Chris Davis. Updated: Sat Nov 13 14:59:06 HST 2004

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