TY - JOUR
T1 - The oxford-dartmouth thirty degree survey - I. Observations and calibration of a wide-field multiband survey
AU - MacDonald, Emily C.
AU - Allen, Paul
AU - Dalton, Gavin
AU - Moustakas, Leonidas A.
AU - Heymans, Catherine
AU - Edmondson, Edward
AU - Blake, Chris
AU - Clewley, Lee
AU - Hammell, Molly C.
AU - Olding, Ed
AU - Miller, Lance
AU - Rawlings, Steve
AU - Wall, Jasper
AU - Wegner, Gary
AU - Wolf, Christian
PY - 2004/8/21
Y1 - 2004/8/21
N2 - The Oxford-Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey (ODTS) is a deep, wide, multiband imaging survey designed to cover a total of 30 deg2 in BV Ri′Z, with a subset of U- and K-band data, in four separate fields of 5-10 deg2 centred at 00:18:24 +34:52, 09:09:45 +40:50, 13:40:00 +02:30 and 16:39:30 +45:24. Observations have been made using the Wide Field Camera on the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) in La Palma to average limiting depths (5σ Vega, aperture magnitudes) of U = 24.8, B = 25.6, V = 25.0, R = 24.6 and i′ = 23.5, with observations taken in ideal conditions reaching the target depths of U = 25.3, B = 26.2, V = 25.7, R = 25.4 and i′ = 24.6. The INT Z-band data were found to be severely effected by fringing and, consequently, are now being obtained at the MDM observatory in Arizona. A complementary K-band survey has also been carried out at MDM, reaching an average depth of K5σ ≈ 18.5. At present, approximately 23 deg2 of the ODTS have been observed, with 3.5 deg2 of the K-band survey completed. This paper details the survey goals, field selection, observation strategy and data reduction procedure, focusing on the photometric calibration and catalogue construction. Preliminary photometric redshifts have been obtained for a subsample of the objects with R ≤ 23. These results are presented alongside a brief description of the photo-metric redshift determination technique used. The median redshift of the survey is estimated to be z ≈ 0.7 from a combination of the ODTS photometric redshifts and comparison with the redshift distributions of other surveys. Finally, galaxy number counts for the ODTS are presented which are found to be in excellent agreement with previous studies.
AB - The Oxford-Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey (ODTS) is a deep, wide, multiband imaging survey designed to cover a total of 30 deg2 in BV Ri′Z, with a subset of U- and K-band data, in four separate fields of 5-10 deg2 centred at 00:18:24 +34:52, 09:09:45 +40:50, 13:40:00 +02:30 and 16:39:30 +45:24. Observations have been made using the Wide Field Camera on the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) in La Palma to average limiting depths (5σ Vega, aperture magnitudes) of U = 24.8, B = 25.6, V = 25.0, R = 24.6 and i′ = 23.5, with observations taken in ideal conditions reaching the target depths of U = 25.3, B = 26.2, V = 25.7, R = 25.4 and i′ = 24.6. The INT Z-band data were found to be severely effected by fringing and, consequently, are now being obtained at the MDM observatory in Arizona. A complementary K-band survey has also been carried out at MDM, reaching an average depth of K5σ ≈ 18.5. At present, approximately 23 deg2 of the ODTS have been observed, with 3.5 deg2 of the K-band survey completed. This paper details the survey goals, field selection, observation strategy and data reduction procedure, focusing on the photometric calibration and catalogue construction. Preliminary photometric redshifts have been obtained for a subsample of the objects with R ≤ 23. These results are presented alongside a brief description of the photo-metric redshift determination technique used. The median redshift of the survey is estimated to be z ≈ 0.7 from a combination of the ODTS photometric redshifts and comparison with the redshift distributions of other surveys. Finally, galaxy number counts for the ODTS are presented which are found to be in excellent agreement with previous studies.
KW - Catalogues
KW - Cosmology: Observations
KW - Galaxies: General
KW - Large-scale structure of universe
KW - Surveys
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=4344607832&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08014.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08014.x
M3 - Review article
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 352
SP - 1255
EP - 1272
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
IS - 4
ER -