Bibcode
Oliver, Seb; Rowan-Robinson, Michael; Alexander, D. M.; Almaini, O.; Balcells, M.; Baker, A. C.; Barcons, X.; Barden, M.; Bellas-Velidis, I.; Cabrera-Guerra, F.; Carballo, R.; Cesarsky, C. J.; Ciliegi, P.; Clements, D. L.; Crockett, H.; Danese, L.; Dapergolas, A.; Drolias, B.; Eaton, N.; Efstathiou, A.; Egami, E.; Elbaz, D.; Fadda, D.; Fox, M.; Franceschini, A.; Genzel, R.; Goldschmidt, P.; Graham, M.; Gonzalez-Serrano, J. I.; Gonzalez-Solares, E. A.; Granato, G. L.; Gruppioni, C.; Herbstmeier, U.; Héraudeau, P.; Joshi, M.; Kontizas, E.; Kontizas, M.; Kotilainen, J. K.; Kunze, D.; La Franca, F.; Lari, C.; Lawrence, A.; Lemke, D.; Linden-Vørnle, M. J. D.; Mann, R. G.; Márquez, I.; Masegosa, J.; Mattila, K.; McMahon, R. G.; Miley, G.; Missoulis, V.; Mobasher, B.; Morel, T.; Nørgaard-Nielsen, H.; Omont, A.; Papadopoulos, P.; Perez-Fournon, I.; Puget, J.-L.; Rigopoulou, D.; Rocca-Volmerange, B.; Serjeant, S.; Silva, L.; Sumner, T.; Surace, C.; Vaisanen, P.; van der Werf, P. P.; Verma, A.; Vigroux, L.; Villar-Martin, M.; Willott, C. J.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 316, Issue 4, pp. 749-767.
Advertised on:
8
2000
Citations
195
Refereed citations
161
Description
We describe the European Large Area ISO Survey (ELAIS). ELAIS was the
largest single Open Time project conducted by ISO, mapping an area of
12deg2 at 15μm with ISOCAM and at 90μm with ISOPHOT.
Secondary surveys in other ISO bands were undertaken by the ELAIS team
within the fields of the primary survey, with 6deg2 being
covered at 6.7μm and 1deg2 at 175μm. This paper
discusses the goals of the project and the techniques employed in its
construction, as well as presenting details of the observations carried
out, the data from which are now in the public domain. We outline the
ELAIS `preliminary analysis' which led to the detection of over 1000
sources from the 15 and 90-μm surveys (the majority selected at
15μm with a flux limit of ~3mJy), to be fed into a ground-based
follow-up campaign, as well as a programme of photometric observations
of detected sources using both ISOCAM and ISOPHOT. We detail how the
ELAIS survey complements other ISO surveys in terms of depth and areal
coverage, and show that the extensive multi-wavelength coverage of the
ELAIS fields resulting from our concerted and on-going follow-up
programme has made these regions amongst the best studied areas of their
size in the entire sky, and, therefore, natural targets for future
surveys. This paper accompanies the release of extremely reliable
subsets of the `preliminary analysis' products. Subsequent papers in
this series will give further details of our data reduction techniques,
reliability and completeness estimates and present the 15- and 90-μm
number counts from the `preliminary analysis', while a further series of
papers will discuss in detail the results from the ELAIS `final
analysis', as well as from the follow-up programme.