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Redshift data and accurate four-color infrared photometry are presented for a complete IRAS sample of galaxies brighter than 2 Jy at 60 microns. A simple power law provides a good fit to the distribution for luminosities from 10 to the 10th to 10 to the 12th solar. There is no indication of an exponential dropoff in the luminosity function at high energies. A flattening of the luminosity function occurs at L less than 10 to the 20th solar. The highest luminosity galaxies typically are found in multiple, possibly interacting, systems and exhibit marginally narrower infrared spectral energy distributions than the isolated spirals which predominate at low luminosities. Infrared-bright galaxies come from a different population than the majority of optically bright galaxies. In particular, galaxies of low blue luminosity are not strong infrared emitters.
Smith et al. (Wed,) studied this question.