2003
DOI: 10.1086/376841
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TheIRASRevised Bright Galaxy Sample

Abstract: IRAS flux densities, redshifts, and infrared luminosities are reported for all sources identified in the IRAS Revised Bright Galaxy Sample (RBGS), a complete flux-limited survey of all extragalactic objects with total 60 lm flux density greater than 5.24 Jy, covering the entire sky surveyed by IRAS at Galactic latitudes |b| > 5 . The RBGS includes 629 objects, with median and mean sample redshifts of 0.0082 and 0.0126, respectively, and a maximum redshift of 0.0876. The RBGS supersedes the previous two-part IR… Show more

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Cited by 1,088 publications
(1,473 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…The InfraRed Astronomy Satellite (IRAS; Neugebauer et al, 1984) was responsible for the discovery of these extremely bright extragalactic sources during its short lifetime in 1983. While close to 250,000 extragalactic sources were logged by IRAS over the entire sky, the subset of 'bright galaxies' became the most wellstudied infrared sources (629 of which make up the 'Revised Bright Galaxy Sample,' or RBGS; Sanders et al, 2003). Further populations of local infrared-bright galaxies were discovered by ISOPHOT aboard the ISO satellite in the mid-1990s (Lemke et al, 1996).…”
Section: Local Infrared-luminous Galaxiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The InfraRed Astronomy Satellite (IRAS; Neugebauer et al, 1984) was responsible for the discovery of these extremely bright extragalactic sources during its short lifetime in 1983. While close to 250,000 extragalactic sources were logged by IRAS over the entire sky, the subset of 'bright galaxies' became the most wellstudied infrared sources (629 of which make up the 'Revised Bright Galaxy Sample,' or RBGS; Sanders et al, 2003). Further populations of local infrared-bright galaxies were discovered by ISOPHOT aboard the ISO satellite in the mid-1990s (Lemke et al, 1996).…”
Section: Local Infrared-luminous Galaxiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It possesses characteristics of an extreme starburst with L FIR ∼ 10 11 L (Sanders et al 2003), making it a luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) with a high star formation rate of ∼25 M yr −1 as determined from Hα, radio continuum, FIR and hard X-ray observations (Grimes et al 2007). Broadband images of Hα show three bright star-forming condensations with unrelaxed kinematic structure and faint extended shell structures in the outer regions of the galaxy, all suggesting an ongoing merger (Bergvall & Östlin 2002;Östlin et al 1999).…”
Section: The Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…h Infrared fluxes at λ 12, 25, 60 and 100 µm, respectively. i From Sanders et al (2003). j Far infrared (FIR) and infrared (IR) luminosity, respectively, using the formalism of Sanders & Mirabel (1996) with their constant, C = 1, and L = 3.84 × 10 33 erg s −1 .…”
Section: Ngc 5529 and Its Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%