An orientation bias in observations of submillimetre galaxies. Lovell, C. C., Geach, J. E., Davé, R., Narayanan, D., Coppin, K. E. K., Li, Q., Franco, M., & Privon, G. C. arXiv:2106.11588, June, 2021. arXiv: 2106.11588
An orientation bias in observations of submillimetre galaxies [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Recent high-resolution interferometric images of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) reveal fascinatingly complex morphologies. This raises a number of questions: how does the relative orientation of a galaxy affect its observed submillimetre emission, and does this result in an `orientation bias' in the selection and analysis of such galaxies in flux-limited cosmological surveys? We investigate these questions using the Simba cosmological simulation paired with the dust radiative transfer code Powderday. We select eight simulated SMGs ($S_\{850\}{\}gtrsim2$ mJy) at $z = 2$, and measure the variance of their `observed' emission over 50 random orientations. Each galaxy exhibits significant scatter in its emission close to the peak of the thermal dust emission, with variation in flux density of up to ${\}sim$50 mJy at the peak. This results in an appreciable dispersion in the inferred dust temperatures and infrared luminosities ($16{\textasciicircum}\{{\}mathrm\{th\}\}-84{\textasciicircum}\{{\}mathrm\{th\}\}$ percentile ranges of 5 K and 0.1 dex, respectively) and therefore a fundamental uncertainty in derived parameters such as dust mass and star formation rate (${\}sim$30% for the latter using simple calibrations). Using a Monte Carlo simulation we also assess the impact of orientation on flux-limited surveys, finding a bias in the selection of SMGs towards those with face-on orientations, as well as those at lower redshifts. We predict that the orientation bias will affect flux-limited single-dish surveys, most significantly at THz frequencies, and this bias should be taken into account when placing the results of targeted follow-up studies in a statistical context.
@article{lovell_orientation_2021,
	title = {An orientation bias in observations of submillimetre galaxies},
	url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2106.11588},
	abstract = {Recent high-resolution interferometric images of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) reveal fascinatingly complex morphologies. This raises a number of questions: how does the relative orientation of a galaxy affect its observed submillimetre emission, and does this result in an `orientation bias' in the selection and analysis of such galaxies in flux-limited cosmological surveys? We investigate these questions using the Simba cosmological simulation paired with the dust radiative transfer code Powderday. We select eight simulated SMGs (\$S\_\{850\}{\textbackslash}gtrsim2\$ mJy) at \$z = 2\$, and measure the variance of their `observed' emission over 50 random orientations. Each galaxy exhibits significant scatter in its emission close to the peak of the thermal dust emission, with variation in flux density of up to \${\textbackslash}sim\$50 mJy at the peak. This results in an appreciable dispersion in the inferred dust temperatures and infrared luminosities (\$16{\textasciicircum}\{{\textbackslash}mathrm\{th\}\}-84{\textasciicircum}\{{\textbackslash}mathrm\{th\}\}\$ percentile ranges of 5 K and 0.1 dex, respectively) and therefore a fundamental uncertainty in derived parameters such as dust mass and star formation rate (\${\textbackslash}sim\$30\% for the latter using simple calibrations). Using a Monte Carlo simulation we also assess the impact of orientation on flux-limited surveys, finding a bias in the selection of SMGs towards those with face-on orientations, as well as those at lower redshifts. We predict that the orientation bias will affect flux-limited single-dish surveys, most significantly at THz frequencies, and this bias should be taken into account when placing the results of targeted follow-up studies in a statistical context.},
	urldate = {2021-09-07},
	journal = {arXiv:2106.11588},
	author = {Lovell, C. C. and Geach, J. E. and Davé, R. and Narayanan, D. and Coppin, K. E. K. and Li, Q. and Franco, M. and Privon, G. C.},
	month = jun,
	year = {2021},
	note = {arXiv: 2106.11588},
	keywords = {Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies},
}

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