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We use the SCUBA-2 submillimeter camera mounted on the JCMT to obtain extremely deep number counts at 450 and 850um. We combine data on two cluster lensing fields, A1689 and A370, and three blank fields, CDF-N, CDF-S, and COSMOS, to measure the counts over a wide flux range at each wavelength. We use statistical fits to broken power law representations to determine the number counts. This allows us to probe to the deepest possible level in the data. At both wavelengths our results agree well with the literature in the flux range over which they have been measured, with the exception of the 850um counts in CDF-S, where we do not observe the counts deficit found by previous single-dish observations. At 450um, we detect significant counts down to ~1mJy, an unprecedented depth at this wavelength. By integrating the number counts above this flux limit, we measure 113.9^{+49.7}_{-28.4} Jydeg^{-2} of the 450um extragalactic background light (EBL). The majority of this contribution is from sources with S_450um between 1-10mJy, and these sources are likely to be the ones that are analogous to the local luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs). At 850um, we measure 37.3^{+21.1}_{-12.9} Jydeg^{-2} of the EBL. Because of the large systematic uncertainties on the COBE measurements, the percentage of the EBL we resolve could range from 48%-153% (44%-178%) at 450 (850)um. Based on high-resolution SMA observations of around half of the 4sigma 850um sample in CDF-N, we find that 12.5^{+12.1}_{-6.8}% of the sources are blends of multiple fainter sources. This is a low multiple fraction, and we find no significant difference between our original SCUBA-2 850um counts and the multiplicity corrected counts.
The Cosmic Far-Infrared Background (CIB) at wavelengths around 160 {mu}m corresponds to the peak intensity of the whole Extragalactic Background Light, which is being measured with increasing accuracy. However, the build up of the CIB emission as a f
We present deep observations at 450 um and 850 um in the Extended Groth Strip field taken with the SCUBA-2 camera mounted on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope as part of the deep SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey (S2CLS), achieving a central instrument
We detect correlations in the cosmic far-infrared background due to the clustering of star-forming galaxies in observations made with the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope, BLAST, at 250, 350, and 500 microns. We perform jackknife
The cosmic infrared background (CIRB) consists mainly of the integrated light of distant galaxies. In the far-infrared the current estimates of its surface brightness are based on the measurements of the COBE satellite. Independent confirmation of th
The Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2) is the James Clerk Maxwell Telescopes continuum imager, operating simultaneously at 450 and 850~$mu$m. SCUBA-2 was commissioned in 2009--2011 and since that time, regular observations of point