Bibcode
Pentericci, L.; McLure, R. J.; Garilli, B.; Cucciati, O.; Franzetti, P.; Iovino, A.; Amorin, R.; Bolzonella, M.; Bongiorno, A.; Carnall, A. C.; Castellano, M.; Cimatti, A.; Cirasuolo, M.; Cullen, F.; De Barros, S.; Dunlop, J. S.; Elbaz, D.; Finkelstein, S. L.; Fontana, A.; Fontanot, F.; Fumana, M.; Gargiulo, A.; Guaita, L.; Hartley, W. G.; Jarvis, M. J.; Juneau, S.; Karman, W.; Maccagni, D.; Marchi, F.; Marmol-Queralto, E.; Nandra, K.; Pompei, E.; Pozzetti, L.; Scodeggio, M.; Sommariva, V.; Talia, M.; Almaini, O.; Balestra, I.; Bardelli, S.; Bell, E. F.; Bourne, N.; Bowler, R. A. A.; Brusa, M.; Buitrago, F.; Caputi, K. I.; Cassata, P.; Charlot, S.; Citro, A.; Cresci, G.; Cristiani, S.; Curtis-Lake, E.; Dickinson, M.; Fazio, G. G.; Ferguson, H. C.; Fiore, F.; Franco, M.; Fynbo, J. P. U.; Galametz, A.; Georgakakis, A.; Giavalisco, M.; Grazian, A.; Hathi, N. P.; Jung, I.; Kim, S.; Koekemoer, A. M.; Khusanova, Y.; Le Fèvre, O.; Lotz, J. M.; Mannucci, F.; Maltby, D. T.; Matsuoka, K.; McLeod, D. J.; Mendez-Hernandez, H.; Mendez-Abreu, J.; Mignoli, M.; Moresco, M.; Mortlock, A.; Nonino, M.; Pannella, M.; Papovich, C.; Popesso, P.; Rosario, D. P.; Salvato, M.; Santini, P.; Schaerer, D.; Schreiber, C.; Stark, D. P.; Tasca, L. A. M.; Thomas, R.; Treu, T.; Vanzella, E.; Wild, V.; Williams, C. C.; Zamorani, G.; Zucca, E.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 616, id.A174, 15 pp.
Advertised on:
9
2018
Journal
Citations
120
Refereed citations
107
Description
This paper describes the observations and the first data release (DR1)
of the ESO public spectroscopic survey "VANDELS, a deep VIMOS survey of
the CANDELS CDFS and UDS fields". The main targets of VANDELS are
star-forming galaxies at redshift 2.4 < z < 5.5, an epoch when the
Universe had not yet reached 20% of its current age, and massive passive
galaxies in the range 1 < z < 2.5. By adopting a strategy of
ultra-long exposure times, ranging from a minimum of 20 h to a maximum
of 80 h per source, VANDELS is specifically designed to be the
deepest-ever spectroscopic survey of the high-redshift Universe.
Exploiting the red sensitivity of the refurbished VIMOS spectrograph,
the survey is obtaining ultra-deep optical spectroscopy covering the
wavelength range 4800-10 000 Å with a sufficiently high
signal-to-noise ratio to investigate the astrophysics of high-redshift
galaxy evolution via detailed absorption line studies of well-defined
samples of high-redshift galaxies. VANDELS-DR1 is the release of all
medium-resolution spectroscopic data obtained during the first season of
observations, on a 0.2 square degree area centered around the
CANDELS-CDFS (Chandra deep-field south) and CANDELS-UDS (ultra-deep
survey) areas. It includes data for all galaxies for which the total (or
half of the total) scheduled integration time was completed. The DR1
contains 879 individual objects, approximately half in each of the two
fields, that have a measured redshift, with the highest reliable
redshifts reaching zspec 6. In DR1 we include fully
wavelength-calibrated and flux-calibrated 1D spectra, the associated
error spectrum and sky spectrum, and the associated
wavelength-calibrated 2D spectra. We also provide a catalog with the
essential galaxy parameters, including spectroscopic redshifts and
redshift quality flags measured by the collaboration. We present the
survey layout and observations, the data reduction and redshift
measurement procedure, and the general properties of the VANDELS-DR1
sample. In particular, we discuss the spectroscopic redshift
distribution and the accuracy of the photometricredshifts for each
individual target category, and we provide some examples of data
products for the various target typesand the different quality flags.
All VANDELS-DR1 data are publicly available and can be retrieved from
the ESO archive. Two further data releases are foreseen in the next two
years, and a final data release is currently scheduled for June 2020,
which will include an improved rereduction of the entire spectroscopic
data set.
Related projects
Galaxy Evolution in Clusters of Galaxies
Galaxies in the universe can be located in different environments, some of them are isolated or in low density regions and they are usually called field galaxies. The others can be located in galaxy associations, going from loose groups to clusters or even superclusters of galaxies. One of the foremost challenges of the modern Astrophysics is to
Jairo
Méndez Abreu