![]() | Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 2005. 43:
xxx-xxx Copyright © 2005 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved |
The CIB is the infrared part of the extragalactic background, the radiation content of the Universe today produced by galaxies at all redshifts and seen as an isotropic extragalactic background radiation. Partridge & Peebles (1967) predicted that observations of such a background could give powerful constraints on the cosmological evolution.
3.1. General Observations and Direct Cosmological Implications
The detection of the infrared part of the extragalactic background
(the CIB for Cosmic Infrared Background) was the major objective of
the DIRBE experiment aboard COBE. In fact, the CIB was first detected
at long wavelengths by using the FIRAS spectrometer:
> 200 µm
(Puget et al. 1996).
The CIB has subsequently been detected by DIRBE at 2.4, 3.5, 100, 140,
240 µm (see
Hauser & Dwek 2001
and Kashlinsky 2005
for two reviews). The extragalactic
background at 2.4 and 3.5 µm is significantly larger than that
predicted by the integrated galaxy counts and their extrapolation.
Similarly, the ext
ragalactic background in the optical has been
finally evaluated in combining several methods by
Bernstein et al. (2002)
and found to be larger than the value given by the
integrated fluxes of galaxies by a factor larger than 2. In the
mid-infrared, the interplanetary zodiacal dust emission is so strong
that only upper limits were obtained by DIRBE. The combination of
number counts by ISO/ISOCAM at 15 µm (see
Elbaz & Cesarsky
2003)
and by Spitzer at 24 µm (e.g.,
Papovich et al. 2004)
giving lower limits, with the observations of TeV gamma ray
emission from distant AGNs (e.g.,
Renault et al. 2001;
Dwek & Krennrich
2005),
gives a good measurement of the background at these
wavelengths. The full cosmic background spectrum is shown in
Figure 2. Only most recent and strongly constraining
measurements have been plotted for clarity.
![]() |
Figure 2. The extragalactic background over
three decades in frequency
from the near UV to millimeter wavelengths. Only strongly constraining
measurements have been reported. We show for comparison in grey an SED
of M82
(Chanial, 2003)
- a starburst galaxy at L = 3 × 1010
L |
Figure 2 clearly shows that the optical and infrared
cosmic backgrounds are well separated. The first surprising result is
that the power in the infrared is comparable to the power in the
optical. In contrast, we know that locally, the infrared output of
galaxies is only one third of the optical output. This implies that
infrared galaxies grow more luminous with increasing z faster than
do optical galaxies. A second important property to note is that the
slope of the long wavelength part of the CIB,
I
(Gispert et al. 2000),
is much less steep than the long
wavelengths spectrum of galaxies (as illustrated in
Figure 2 with the M82 SED). This implies that
the millimeter CIB is not due to the millimeter emission of the galaxies
that account for the peak of the CIB
(
150 µm). The implications in terms
of energy output have been drawn by, e.g.
Gispert et al. (2000).
The infrared production rate per comoving unit volume (a) evolves
faster between redshift zero and 1 than the optical one and (b)
has to stay roughly constant at higher redshifts up to redshift 3 at least.