©2001 Sky Publishing Corp. All Rights Reserved.: September 2001
©2001 Sky Publishing Corp. All Rights Reserved.: September 2001
©2001 Sky Publishing Corp. All Rights Reserved.: September 2001
WIDE-AREA SURVE YS THAT COVER BROAD SWATHS OF THE CELESTIAL SPHERE TO SHALLOW DEPTHS.
NOW ASTRONOMERS ARE ABOUT TO FINISH A PROJECT THAT BRIDGES THE GAP BET WEEN THEM.
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1 3. S C A L E : 1
Found deep within this small patch of sky are a beautiful face-on spiral galaxy, an interacting system with a
long tidal tail, and a distant galaxy cluster.
BY DAVID T Y TELL
lect data lots and lots of data that astronomers can put to countless uses. In
particular, by measuring and analyzing
vast numbers of galaxies and quasars, astronomers expect to track and understand
the evolution of the universe.
These cutting-edge imaging projects
divide into two types: those that look
very deep and those that look very wide.
The Hubble Deep Fields go as faint as
30th magnitude, recording galaxy formation back to very early epochs. But they
lack breadth. Such so-called pencil-beam
surveys focus on sky areas so narrow
(about 2 arcminutes across in the case of
the HDFs) that processes such as galaxycluster formation and evolution are impossible to see. Conversely, the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey will cover an astonishing 10,000 square degrees, almost a
quarter of the celestial sphere. But it goes
only as deep as 23rd magnitude, so it can
measure only large-scale structures in
relatively recent epochs.
NDWFS is the compromise that astronomers have been longing for. Were
2001 Sky Publishing Corp. All rights reserved.
15h
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BOTES
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VENATICI
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NOAO Deep
Wide-Field Survey
Arcturus
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The NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey is randomly scattered with new and interesting
objects. Near the center of this image is a
pair of interacting galaxies.
search, the Large Area Lyman-Alpha Survey, found 150 young, highly energetic
starburst galaxies in a half-degree (fullMoon-size) patch of sky. These galaxies,
at redshifts around 4.5, should bring insight into early stages of star formation
and galaxy evolution. By combing the
two overlapping samples, says Rhoads, we
can study the relation of galaxies in a way
that hasnt been seen at [this redshift].
Despite its awesome size and scope,
the NDWFS is not much more than a
first look. Its real strength will come
from follow-up observations such as
those conducted by Malhotra and Rhoads.
Leading the charge will be the two 8.1meter telescopes of the Gemini Observatory, the newest and largest instruments
in the NOAO fleet. The Chandra X-ray
Observatory, Hubble Space Telescope,
and the soon-to-be-launched Space Infrared Telescope Facility will also conduct follow-up work.
Other teams are carrying out similar
surveys that straddle the gap between extreme width and extreme depth. In April
the European Southern Observatory came
out with its own deep field, dubbed
Capodimonte for the Italian institution
carrying it out. Imaged with the 2.2meter telescope at ESOs La Silla Observatory in Chile, this 1-square field in
Corvus reached as faint as 25th magnitude. In the process it captured and
measured more than 35,000 objects in
several colors. As with the NOAO pro-
5. S C A L E : 1
This enlargement from the first image is
0.15 on a side. Here a large, low-redshift
galaxy cluster is seen within an ubiquitous cosmic foreground of young faint
blue galaxies.
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6. S C A L E : 1
This field is centered on a radio galaxy
first detected by a survey carried out with
the Very Large Array (VLA) called Faint
Images of the Radio Sky at 20
Centimeters (FIRST). The radio
galaxy is the elliptical member
of an interacting pair of galaxies (arrowed). The FIRST radio
image (inset) is at the same
scale as the NDWFS view.
7. S C A L E : .5
The depth and breadth of the NOAO Deep
Wide-Field Survey is prompting many
other examinations of its fields at different wavelengths. Most notably, the northern Botes field has been mapped at long
radio wavelengths (90 centimeters) using
the VLA and at 21 cm with the Westerbork
Synthesis Radio Telescope. One example
of the collaborative science is this 2.6-by2.6 field centered on a spiral galaxy. This
galaxy is likely to be a radio source detected by the Westerbork survey, which is
being carried out by Huub Rttgering and
collaborators at the University of Leiden
in the Netherlands. Future observations
of the field are planned with the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, scheduled for
launch in 2002.
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