Bibcode
DOI
Lonsdale, Carol J.; Smith, Harding E.; Rowan-Robinson, Michael; Surace, Jason; Shupe, David; Xu, Cong; Oliver, Sebastian; Padgett, Deborah; Fang, Fan; Conrow, Tim; Franceschini, Alberto; Gautier, Nick; Griffin, Matt; Hacking, Perry; Masci, Frank; Morrison, Glenn; O'Linger, Joanne; Owen, Frazer; Pérez-Fournon, Ismael; Pierre, Marguerite; Puetter, Rick; Stacey, Gordon; Castro, Sandra; Polletta, Maria del Carmen; Farrah, Duncan; Jarrett, Tom; Frayer, Dave; Siana, Brian; Babbedge, Tom; Dye, Simon; Fox, Matt; Gonzalez-Solares, Eduardo; Salaman, Malcolm; Berta, Stefano; Condon, Jim J.; Dole, Hervé; Serjeant, Steve
Referencia bibliográfica
The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 115, Issue 810, pp. 897-927.
Fecha de publicación:
8
2003
Número de citas
671
Número de citas referidas
587
Descripción
The SIRTF Wide-Area Infrared Extragalactic Survey (SWIRE), the largest
SIRTF Legacy program, is a wide-area imaging survey to trace the
evolution of dusty, star-forming galaxies, evolved stellar populations,
and active galactic nuclei (AGNs) as a function of environment, from
redshifts z~3 to the current epoch. SWIRE will survey seven
high-latitude fields, totaling 60-65 deg2 in all seven SIRTF
bands: Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) 3.6, 4.5, 5.6, and 8 μm and
Multiband Imaging Photometer for SIRTF (MIPS) 24, 70, and 160 μm.
Extensive modeling suggests that the Legacy Extragalactic Catalog may
contain in excess of 2 million IR-selected galaxies, dominated by (1)
~150,000 luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs;
LFIR>1011 Lsolar) detected by MIPS
(and significantly more detected by IRAC), ~7000 of these with z>2
(2) 1 million IRAC-detected early-type galaxies (~2×105
with z>1 and ~10,000 with z>2) and (3) ~20,000 classical AGNs
detected with MIPS, plus significantly more dust-obscured quasi-stellar
objects/AGNs among the LIRGs. SWIRE will provide an unprecedented view
of the evolution of galaxies, structure, and AGNs.
The key scientific goals of SWIRE are (1) to determine the evolution of
actively star forming and passively evolving galaxies in order to
understand the history of galaxy formation in the context of cosmic
structure formation; (2) to determine the evolution of the spatial
distribution and clustering of evolved galaxies, starbursts, and AGNs in
the key redshift range 0.5