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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

The UKIRT infrared deep sky survey (UKIDSS)

A. Lawrence; S. J. Warren; Omar Almaini; A. C. Edge; Nigel Hambly; R. F. Jameson; Philip W. Lucas; M. Casali; A. J. Adamson; Simon Dye; James P. Emerson; S. Foucaud; Paul C. Hewett; Paul Hirst; Simon T. Hodgkin; M. J. Irwin; N. Lodieu; Richard G. McMahon; Chris Simpson; Ian Smail; D. Mortlock; M. Folger

Final published version including significant revisions. Twenty four pages, fourteen figures. Original version April 2006; final version published in MNRAS August 2007


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

The WFCAM Science Archive

Nigel Hambly; Ross Collins; N. J. G. Cross; Robert G. Mann; Mike Read; Eckhard Sutorius; I. A. Bond; J. Bryant; James P. Emerson; A. Lawrence; L. Rimoldini; Jonathan M. Stewart; P. M. Williams; A. J. Adamson; Paul Hirst; S. Dye; S. J. Warren

We describe the WFCAM Science Archive, which is the primary point of access for users of data from the wide-field infrared camera WFCAM on the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT), especially science catalogue products from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey. We describe the database design with emphasis on those aspects of the system that enable users to fully exploit the survey data sets in a variety of different ways. We give details of the database-driven curation applications that take data from the standard nightly pipeline-processed and calibrated files for the production of science-ready survey data sets. We describe the fundamentals of querying relational databases with a set of astronomy usage examples, and illustrate the results.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

UltraVISTA: a new ultra-deep near-infrared survey in COSMOS

H. J. McCracken; B. Milvang-Jensen; James Dunlop; Marijn Franx; J. P. U. Fynbo; O. Le Fèvre; J. Holt; Karina Caputi; Y. Goranova; Fernando Buitrago; James P. Emerson; Wolfram Freudling; P. Hudelot; C. López-Sanjuan; F. Magnard; Y. Mellier; P. Møller; Kim K. Nilsson; W. Sutherland; L. Tasca; J. Zabl

In this paper we describe the first data release of the UltraVISTA near-infrared imaging survey of the COSMOS field. We summarise the key goals and design of the survey and provide a detailed description of our data reduction techniques. We provide stacked, sky-subtracted images in YJHK_s and narrow-band filters constructed from data collected during the first year of UltraVISTA observations. Our stacked images reach 5σAB depths in an aperture of 2″ diameter of ~25 in Y and ~24 in JHK_s bands and all have sub-arcsecond seeing. To this 5σ limit, our K_s catalogue contains 216 268 sources. We carry out a series of quality assessment tests on our images and catalogues, comparing our stacks with existing catalogues. The 1σ astrometric rms in both directions for stars selected with 17.0 < K_s(AB) < 19.5 is ~0.08″ in comparison to the publicly-available COSMOS ACS catalogues. Our images are resampled to the same pixel scale and tangent point as the publicly available COSMOS data and so may be easily used to generate multi-colour catalogues using this data. All images and catalogues presented in this paper are publicly available through ESO’s “phase 3” archiving and distribution system and from the UltraVISTA web site.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey Early Data Release

Simon Dye; S. J. Warren; Nigel Hambly; N. J. G. Cross; S. T. Hodgkin; M. J. Irwin; A. Lawrence; A. J. Adamson; Omar Almaini; A. C. Edge; Paul Hirst; R. F. Jameson; P. W. Lucas; C. van Breukelen; J. Bryant; Mark M. Casali; Ross Collins; Gavin B. Dalton; Jonathan Ivor Davies; C. J. Davis; James P. Emerson; D. W. Evans; S. Foucaud; E. Gonzales-Solares; Paul C. Hewett; Timothy Kendall; T. H. Kerr; S. K. Leggett; N. Lodieu; J. Loveday

This paper defines the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Early Data Release (EDR). UKIDSS is a set of five large near-infrared surveys being undertaken with the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope Wide Field Camera (WFCAM). The programme began in 2005 May and has an expected duration of 7 yr. Each survey uses some or all of the broad-band filter complement ZY JHK. The EDR is the first public release of data to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) community. All worldwide releases occur after a delay of 18 months from the ESO release. The EDR provides a small sample data set, ∼50 deg(2) (about 1 per cent of the whole of UKIDSS), that is a lower limit to the expected quality of future survey data releases. In addition, an EDR+ data set contains all EDR data plus extra data of similar quality, but for areas not observed in all of the required filters (amounting to ∼220 deg(2)). The first large data release, DR1, will occur in mid-2006. We provide details of the observational implementation, the data reduction, the astrometric and photometric calibration and the quality control procedures. We summarize the data coverage and quality (seeing, ellipticity, photometricity, depth) for each survey and give a brief guide to accessing the images and catalogues from the WFCAM Science Archive.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

VISTA data flow system: pipeline processing for WFCAM and VISTA

M. J. Irwin; J. Lewis; Simon T. Hodgkin; P. S. Bunclark; D. W. Evans; Richard McMahon; James P. Emerson; Malcolm Stewart; Steven M. Beard

The UKIRT Wide Field Camera (WFCAM) on Mauna Kea and the VISTA IR mosaic camera at ESO, Paranal, with respectively 4 Rockwell 2kx2k and 16 Raytheon 2kx2k IR arrays on 4m-class telescopes, represent an enormous leap in deep IR survey capability. With combined nightly data-rates of typically 1TB, automated pipeline processing and data management requirements are paramount. Pipeline processing of IR data is far more technically challenging than for optical data. IR detectors are inherently more unstable, while the sky emission is over 100 times brighter than most objects of interest, and varies in a complex spatial and temporal manner. In this presentation we describe the pipeline architecture being developed to deal with the IR imaging data from WFCAM and VISTA, and discuss the primary issues involved in an end-to-end system capable of: robustly removing instrument and night sky signatures; monitoring data quality and system integrity; providing astrometric and photometric calibration; and generating photon noise-limited images and astronomical catalogues. Accompanying papers by Emerson etal and Hambly etal provide an overview of the project and a detailed description of the science archive aspects.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

The VISTA Deep Extragalactic Observations (VIDEO) survey

M. J. Jarvis; D. G. Bonfield; Victoria Bruce; J. E. Geach; Kim McAlpine; Ross J. McLure; E. Gonzalez-Solares; M. J. Irwin; J. Lewis; A. Küpcü Yoldas; S. Andreon; N. J. G. Cross; James P. Emerson; Gavin Dalton; James Dunlop; S. T. Hodgkin; Fèvre O. Le; Marios Karouzos; Klaus Meisenheimer; Seb Oliver; Steve Rawlings; Chris Simpson; Ian Smail; D. J. B. Smith; M. Sullivan; W. Sutherland; Sarah White; Jonathan Zwart

In this paper we describe the first data release of the the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) Deep Extragalactic Observations (VIDEO) survey. VIDEO is a ~12degree^2 survey in the near-infrared Z,Y,J,H and K_s bands, specifically designed to enable the evolution of galaxies and large structures to be traced as a function of both epoch and environment from the present day out to z=4, and active galactic nuclei (AGN) and the most massive galaxies up to and into the epoch of reionization. With its depth and area, VIDEO will be able to fully explore the period in the Universe where AGN and starburst activity were at their peak and the first galaxy clusters were beginning to virialize. VIDEO therefore offers a unique data set with which to investigate the interplay between AGN, starbursts and environment, and the role of feedback at a time when it was potentially most crucial. We provide data over the VIDEO-XMM3 tile, which also covers the Canada-France-Hawaii-Telescope Legacy Survey Deep-1 field (CFHTLS-D1). The released VIDEO data reach a 5-sigma AB-magnitude depth of Z=25.7, Y=24.5, J=24.4, H=24.1 and K_s=23.8 in 2 arcsec diameter apertures (the full depth of Y=24.6 will be reached within the full integration time in future releases). The data are compared to previous surveys over this field and we find good astrometric agreement with the Two-Micron All Sky Survey, and source counts in agreement with the recently released UltraVISTA survey data. The addition of the VIDEO data to the CFHTLS-D1 optical data increases the accuracy of photometric redshifts and significantly reduces the fraction of catastrophic outliers over the redshift range 0


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

Near infrared hydrogen lines as diagnostic of accretion and winds in T Tauri stars

D. F. M. Folha; James P. Emerson

From a sample of 50 T Tauri stars, mostly from the Taurus-Auriga complex, Pa


The Astrophysical Journal | 1990

Submillimeter photometry and disk masses of T Tauri disk systems

Fred C. Adams; James P. Emerson; G. A. Fuller

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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

The VISTA Science Archive

N. J. G. Cross; Ross Collins; Robert G. Mann; Mike Read; Eckhard Sutorius; Robert P. Blake; Mark Holliman; Nigel Hambly; James P. Emerson; A. Lawrence; Keith T. Noddle

line profiles were obtained for 49 of the stars and Br


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

The Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA): Design, technical overview, and performance

W. Sutherland; James P. Emerson; Gavin B. Dalton; Eli Atad-Ettedgui; Steven M. Beard; Richard J. Bennett; Naidu Bezawada; Andrew J. Born; Martin E. Caldwell; Paul Clark; Simon C. Craig; David Henry; Paul Jeffers; Bryan Little; Alistair McPherson; John Murray; Malcolm Stewart; Brian Stobie; David Terrett; Kim Ward; Martin S. Whalley; Guy F.W. Woodhouse

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V. D. Ivanov

European Southern Observatory

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M. J. Irwin

University of Cambridge

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W. Sutherland

Queen Mary University of London

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M. Rejkuba

European Southern Observatory

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Nigel Hambly

University of Edinburgh

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Kenji Bekki

University of Western Australia

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A. Lawrence

University of Edinburgh

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Mike Read

University of Edinburgh

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