Bibcode
Lawrence, A.; Warren, S. J.; Almaini, O.; Edge, A. C.; Hambly, N. C.; Jameson, R. F.; Lucas, P.; Casali, M.; Adamson, A.; Dye, S.; Emerson, J. P.; Foucaud, S.; Hewett, P.; Hirst, P.; Hodgkin, S. T.; Irwin, M. J.; Lodieu, N.; McMahon, R. G.; Simpson, C.; Smail, I.; Mortlock, D.; Folger, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 379, Issue 4, pp. 1599-1617.
Fecha de publicación:
8
2007
Número de citas
1000
Número de citas referidas
961
Descripción
We describe the goals, design, implementation, and initial progress of
the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS), a seven-year sky survey
which began in 2005 May. UKIDSS is being carried out using the UKIRT
Wide Field Camera (WFCAM), which has the largest étendue of any
infrared astronomical instrument to date. It is a portfolio of five
survey components covering various combinations of the filter set ZYJHK
and H2. The Large Area Survey, the Galactic Clusters Survey,
and the Galactic Plane Survey cover approximately 7000deg2 to
a depth of K ~ 18; the Deep Extragalactic Survey covers
35deg2 to K ~ 21, and the Ultra Deep Survey covers
0.77deg2 to K ~ 23. Summed together UKIDSS is 12 times larger
in effective volume than the 2MASS survey. The prime aim of UKIDSS is to
provide a long-term astronomical legacy data base; the design is,
however, driven by a series of specific goals - for example, to find the
nearest and faintest substellar objects, to discover Population II brown
dwarfs, if they exist, to determine the substellar mass function, to
break the z = 7 quasar barrier; to determine the epoch of re-ionization,
to measure the growth of structure from z = 3 to the present day, to
determine the epoch of spheroid formation, and to map the Milky Way
through the dust, to several kpc. The survey data are being uniformly
processed. Images and catalogues are being made available through a
fully queryable user interface - the WFCAM Science Archive
(http://surveys.roe.ac.uk/wsa). The data are being released in stages.
The data are immediately public to astronomers in all ESO member states,
and available to the world after 18 months. Before the formal survey
began, UKIRT and the UKIDSS consortia collaborated in obtaining and
analysing a series of small science verification (SV) projects to
complete the commissioning of the camera. We show some results from
these SV projects in order to demonstrate the likely power of the
eventual complete survey. Finally, using the data from the First Data
Release, we assess how well UKIDSS is meeting its design targets so far.