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Wide Field Optical Surveys

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Title: Wide Field Optical Surveys


1
Wide Field Optical Surveys
  • Naoki Yasuda (U.Tokyo, Japan)

2
Optical Sky
  • Optical view of the sky provides us basic
    knowledge of our universe.
  • There is a long history for optical observation
    of the sky.
  • Schmidt Surveys
  • Sloan Digital Sky Survey
  • Time-Domain Surveys

3
Before CCDs are used
4
Schmidt Survey
  • Wide Field Schmidt Telescope
  • 6 x 6 square degree FOV
  • 1200 plates to cover whole sky
  • 15 90 minutes exposure time
  • Takes long time to complete

5
Palomar Observatory Sky Survey
  • POSS-I (1950-57)
  • Cover the sky of d gt -30
  • Blue (400nm) and Red (650nm)
  • 936 photographic plates
  • POSS-II (1987-1999)
  • Finer grain and fast emulsions
  • 103aO -gt IIIaJ, 103aE -gt IIIaF
  • Install achromatic corrector
  • 897 plates

6
Southern Surveys
  • UK Schmidt
  • SERC(J) (1974-87) 606 plates
  • AAO(R) (1989-) 606 plates
  • ESO Schmidt
  • ESO(B) (1973-78)
  • ESO(R) (1973-88)

7
Catalogs
  • Plates were subject to Eye inspection by many
    astronomers.
  • Many basic catalogs were published (galaxies)
  • Morphological Catalogue of Galaxies
  • Vorontsov-Velyaminov et al. (1962-68)
  • Catalogue of Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies
  • Zwicky et al. (1961-68)
  • Uppsala General Catalogue of Galaxies
  • P. Nilson (1973)
  • ESO/Uppsala Survey of the ESO(B) Atlas
  • A. Lauberts (1982)
  • Southern Galaxy Catalogue
  • Corwin (1985)
  • Sample selections and measurements are not
    accurate

8
Digitization
  • Photodensitometer
  • Measure density of plates
  • Need long time to scan full plate
  • From plates to digital information
  • COSMOS / APM
  • Automated measuring machines
  • Advantage of digital data
  • Easy to use
  • Automated analysis
  • Available on-line

9
Information Technology
  • Plates/film ? Electronic devices (CCD)
  • Plate archive ? Digital archive
  • Eye scanning ? Automated analysis
  • IT has changed the way of astronomy
  • Quality assurance
  • Uniform data acquisition
  • Easy usability of huge dataset

10
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
11
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
  • First CCD based wide-field photometric /
    spectroscopic survey
  • Dedicated wide-field telescope
  • Mosaic CCD Camera
  • Multi-fiber spectrograph
  • Dedicated data reduction pipeline
  • Quick reduction for 5MB/sec data rate
  • Dedicated science database
  • All the data are stored in database and accessible

12
Objective of SDSS
  • Mapping the sky
  • Explore our nearby universe (z lt 0.2)
  • Imaging the quarter of whole sky
  • Spectroscopy of 1 million galaxies
  • Generate high-quality and uniform dataset
  • Well calibrated flux
  • Enable statistical study using large dataset

13
Initial Goals
  • Imaging 10,000 square degree of northern sky down
    to 23mag in 5 optical band (3900-9200A)
  • 7 x 107 stars
  • 5 x 107 galaxies
  • 1 x 106 quasars
  • Measure redshifts for 106 galaxies and 105
    quasars
  • Create largest, homogeneous, and high-quality
    catalog of galaxies and quasars

14
Telescope and Camera
FOV is 3 degree in diameterPixel size is
0.4arcsec/pixel
Direction of objects moving
2.5m main telescope
Photometric telescope
15
Filter System
AB system based on 4 primary standards
16
Spectrograph
640 Fiber Plug Plate
17
Time Delay and Integrate
  • Called as drift scan
  • Synchronize the read-out rate of CCD and objects
    movements due to earth rotation
  • Continuously scan the sky
  • No loss for pointing, shutter, and read-out
  • Exposure time is 54 sec
  • Long strips will be observed

18
Survey Stripe
2.5 degree
6 long strips will be observed for each run of
observation. Next day, slightly change the
pointing to fill the gap. With these two
observation, one stripe with width of 2.5 degree
will be complete 45 stripes will be observed.
19
Sky Region of Observation
Observe around north Galactic pole to avoid
Galactic extinction
Map of Galactic extinction
20
Observed area (cumulative)
Spectroscopy
Imaging
21
Imaging
Spectroscopy
Gap
22
End of SDSS-I
  • SDSS-I has finished on June 2006
  • Imaging 8900 deg2 (unique NS)
    detected 210 million objects
    7800 deg2 (footprint NS)
    7300 deg2 (footprint N)
  • Spectroscopy 1880 plates
    1150 N 5800 deg2
    160 S 570
    special 1.14 million spectra of
    celestial objects

23
Survey Plates
  • End of SDSS-I
  • 1310 plates 6300 deg2
  • 840,000 spectra total
  • 590,000 galaxies
  • 75,000 quasars
  • 110,000 stars
  • Diameter 32 degree
  • Radius 267Mpc
  • Volume 0.02 Gpc3
  • End of LEGACY
  • 1700 plates 8200 deg2
  • 1,090,000 spectra
  • 760,000 galaxies
  • 98,000 quasars
  • 140,000 stars
  • Diameter 70 degree
  • Radius 450Mpc
  • Volume 0.09 Gpc3

24
SDSS Data Release
25
Catalogs in Database
  • Imaging
  • Magnitude (5 bands) ? 4 colors
  • PSF, Fiber, Petrosian, and model magnitudes
  • How to discriminate these different kind of
    magnitudes in VO? Does UCD have enough
    functionality?
  • Size, shape, position
  • Radial profiles etc
  • Spectroscopy
  • Object type
  • Redshift
  • Velocity dispersion
  • Line strength

26
data Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Bright
Star Catalog
visualization David W. Hogg (NYU) with help from
Blanton, Finkbeiner, Padmanabhan, Schlegel, Wherry
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Results of Redshift Survey
Pie Diagram Distribution of 66,976 galaxies that
lie near celestial equator. The color
representing the luminosity of galaxies.
40
Scientific results from SDSS
  • There are so many results.
  • I cannot talk about them here.
  • Cosmology Power spectrum, Clustering, BAO,
  • Galaxies Statistical properties, Evolution,
  • Quasars Statistical properties, High-z QSOs,
    Gravitational lenes,
  • Stars L/T dwarfs, White dwarfs, Galactic
    structure,
  • Characteristics are natural consequences of large
    survey
  • Homogeneous and large sample ? statistical study
  • Serendipitous objects

41
Cosmological Perturbations
LCDMadjusted to L galaxy
Wm 0.28, h 0.72 Wb/Wm 0.16, t 0.17
P(k)
Tegmark et al. (2004)
42
SDSS Power Spectrum
  • Tegmark et al. (2004) has calculated P(k) at
    large-scale using SDSS main sample.
  • Good agreement with CDM model.
  • Constrain cosmological parameters using the
    result of CMB and SNe.

Scale ofcluster ofgalaxies
43
WMAP and SDSS are complimentary for constraining
cosmological parameters
WMAP
WMAPSDSS
Tegmark et al. (2004)
44
Constraints on dark energy
Seljak et al. (2005)
45
LRG Power Spectrum
LRG Small errors due to largevolume
Main sample
Eisenstein et al. (2004)
46
Acoustic Oscillations in the CMB
WMAP team (Bennett et al. 2003)
47
Acoustic peak in SDSS
Single peak incorrelation function
No peak in pureCDM model
Eisenstein et al. (2004)
48
Two point correlation function
  • Deviation from power-law over 1Mpc.
  • Correlation within dark matter halo and
    correlation between dark matter halo.

Zehavi et al. (2004)
49
Galaxy Luminosity Function
  • Detailed luminosity functions of local galaxies
  • Dependence of galaxy properties and environments
  • field
  • cluster
  • void
  • Constraint on galaxy evolution

Blanton et al. (2005)
50
Bimodality in Galaxy Properties
  • Bimodality in color, luminosity profile, and
    luminosity
  • M3x1010MoVc120km/sm3x108Mo/kpc2are
    threshold
  • Heavy galaxies are old and light galaxies are
    young.? opposite to clustering

Blanton et al. 2002
51
Mass-Metallicity relation
  • Little metal in small mass galaxies.
  • Galactic wind of SNe plays important role.
  • This is effective to 1010Mo.

Tremonti et al. (2004)
52
Halo stars around disk galaxies
  • Composite of many images

Zibetti et al. (2004)
53
Cosmic Magnification
  • Magnification of QSO due to gravitational lensing
    effect.
  • Correlation function between QSO and galaxies is
    a probe.
  • Magnification of QSO
  • Decrease of number density of QSO
  • 4s detection

Scranton et al. (2005)
54
High-z QSOs
  • Detected as very red objects (i-dropout).
  • 12 QSOs at 5.7ltzlt6.4 has been found.

Fan et al. (2003)
55
Gunn-Peterson Trough
Becker et al. (2001)
56
White et al. (2003)
57
L dwarfs, T dwarfs
58
Data Archives
  • Main page
  • http//www.sdss.org/dr5/index.html
  • Describe data products, instruments, and
    algorisms
  • Data Archive Server
  • http//das.sdss.org/DR5-cgi-bin/DAS
  • Serve flat files (FITS format)
  • Catalog Archive Server
  • http//cas.sdss.org/astrodr5/en/
  • Search tools for SDSS catalogs
  • Casjobs
  • http//casjobs.sdss.org/casjobs/
  • Batch job server for SQL searches

59
CAS
60
Complicated DB queries are possible via SQL
61
Color images (g, r, i) of all area can be
retrieved
62
CASJobs
  • Batch Query Services
  • SQL access to the SDSS database
  • Execute queries background
  • When finished, e-mail will be send
  • Local storage MyDB
  • Store query results
  • Import users own tables
  • Extract to FITS, VOTABLE, or CSV
  • Join tables with tables in any SDSS DB
  • Publish tables to groups

63
Dataset for VO
  • Quality Assurance
  • Homogeneous sampling
  • Same telescope, same software
  • Well calibrated catalog
  • Photometric telescope
  • Ready to do science

64
Impact on VO
  • Pre-maid catalogs are extensively used.
  • Casjobs, OpenSkyQuery,
  • How about images?
  • Measuring our own parameters,
  • We can download images and measure them at our
    own site.
  • But this is not VO like.
  • Image processing in VO require framework to run
    user own programs and huge storage, high-speed
    cpu, and high-speed network.

65
Reference Optical Sky
  • POSS-I over 50 years
  • SDSS has becoming a reference of local universe
    including spectroscopic data.
  • More than 1,000 papers referring SDSS
  • 10-15 years
  • SDSS is not covering entire sky
  • Only 20 25
  • Next large surveys like LSST are planned

66
Time Domain Survey
67
Time Domain Survey
  • Add another axis
  • Spatial, redshift, wavelength time
  • Variability
  • Supernovae, variable stars, AGNs,
  • Proper Motion
  • Nearby faint stars, moving objects,

68
SDSS-II Supernova Survey
  • One of SDSS-II projects (Legacy, SEGUE)
  • Using the SDSS 2.5m telescope
  • During September November of 2005-2007
  • To scan 300 square degrees of the sky every 2
    days
  • Discover supernovae and obtain multi-color light
    curves
  • Spectroscopic follow-up by ARC, HET, MDM, WHT,
    Subaru

69
Observation Area
N S
Decl.1.25d
2.5deg
Decl.-1.25d
R.A.20
R.A.4h
120deg
North and south stripes are observed every 2 days
70
Science goals
  • Type Ia supernovae (SNe)
  • Spectroscopically confirm and obtain
    well-measured light curves of 200 SN Ia from z
    0.05 0.4
  • Bridge low-z (zlt0.05 LOSS, SNF) and high-z
    (0.3ltzlt1.0 ESSENCE, SNLS) sources
  • Understand and minimize systematics of SN Ia as
    distance indicators
  • SN Ib/c, II, rare types
  • Other transients

Redshift desert
Astier et al. (2006)
71
Survey Procedures
  • Image subtraction
  • Search for variable objects using old data as
    reference
  • Process the data of 1 night within 20 hours
  • Scan by Eyes
  • Reduce candidates to 1/10
  • Light curve fit
  • Make template light curves from multi-epoch
    spectra
  • Fit for redshift, extinction, stretch for Ia
  • Able to type with gt90 efficiency after 2-4
    epochs
  • Selection of spectroscopic targets

72
2005 Run Summary
  • Conditions ranged from SDSS survey quality
    (photometric, dark, good seeing) to mixed clouds
    and moon.

73
Results from Fall 2005
  • 130 spectroscopically confirmed SN Ia
  • 14 spectroscopically probable SN Ia
  • 6 SN Ib/c (3 hypernovae)
  • 11 SN II (4 type IIn)
  • 5 AGN
  • hundreds of other unconfirmed SNe with good
    light curves (galaxy spectroscopic redshifts
    measured for 25 additional Ia candidates)
  • Focused primarily on Ia

74
2005 spectroscopically confirmed
75
Plans for Fall 2006 Survey
  • Upgrade search algorithm to reduce scan load
  • Real time alert webpage (possibly VOEvent)
  • Find and actively follow up other types of SNe
    II-P, Ibc and hypernovae, Ia-pec
  • Densely-sampled multi-epoch spectroscopy of
    selected nearby targets
  • Spectral sequence, systematics, rare types

76
Data Archive
  • Corrected imaging frames and catalog of imaging
    objects are available at http//das.sdss.org/DRSN1
    -cgi-bin/DASsn
  • This is SDSS DAS interface
  • Not yet loaded into databases

77
Subaru Deep Survey
  • Subaru Deep Field (SDF)spring, 1 Suprime-Cam FOV
  • UV (GALEX)
  • NIR (UKIRT/WFCAM)
  • MIR (Spitzer)
  • Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Fieldfall, 5 Suprime-Cam
    FOVs
  • X-ray (XMM-Newton)
  • NIR (UKIRT/WFCAM)
  • MIR (Spitzer)
  • (sub-mm (JCMT/SCUBA))
  • Radio (VLA)

78
Optically Variable Object Surveys
  • From 2001 to 2006
  • Time intervals 1hr-5yrs
  • 27x34x6 FOVs
  • 1 SDF
  • 5 SXDF
  • 9-16 epochs
  • 1 hr exposure
  • i-band
  • i26mag_at_AB

79
Detected Objects
  • Find variable objects in subtraction images
  • 400-500 objects / Suprime-Cam FOV? 2,000
    objects / deg2
  • Longer time intervals, more variable objects.

80
An example of variable objects
81
Object Classification
  • Classify objects into 3 categories
  • Variable stars
  • Supernovae (SNe)
  • AGN
  • Based on their
  • Light curves SNe or not
  • Offsets of positions from host objects SNe or
    not
  • Morphology of host objects stars or not
  • Colors of host objects stars or not

82
Object Classification
  • Of 1,220 objects in 3 FOVs in SXDF
  • Variable stars 154 (12)
  • Supernovae 594 (49)roughly consistent with
    predicted number from SN rates
  • AGN 472 (39)Optical variability plays a
    complementary role with X-ray data

Some of blue stars in this region may be
quasars misclassified as stars because of
similar colors
Variable stars
83
Optical magnitude X-ray flux
  • Of gt1,000 X-ray sources, only 200 objects are
    optically variable.
  • On the other hand, 200 AGN candidates are not
    detected in X-rays

84
High Proper Motion Objects
  • 17 high proper motion objects are detected from
    SDF 4 year data
  • gt0.034 arcsec / year
  • 12 objects are candidates of WDs

85
Summary
  • SDSS has becoming reference opitical sky
  • Object catalogs are heavily used
  • Use of images may require more sophisticated VO
    systems
  • Time domain survey will give us new information
  • Deep time domain survey looks interesting
  • Various time intervals are important
  • Proper motion also require long time interval
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