Bibcode
Epchtein, N.; Deul, E.; Derriere, S.; Borsenberger, J.; Egret, D.; Simon, G.; Alard, C.; Balazs, L. G.; de Batz, B.; Cioni, M.-R.; Copet, E.; Dennefeld, M.; Forveille, T.; Fouque, P.; Garzon, F.; Habing, H. J.; Holl, A.; Hron, J.; Kimeswenger, S.; Lacombe, F.; Le Bertre, T.; Loup, C.; Mamon, G. A.; Omont, A.; Paturel, G.; Persi, P.; Robin, A. C.; Rouan, D.; Tiphene, D.; Vauglin, I.; Wagner, S. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
VizieR On-line Data Catalog: B/denis. Originally published in: 1999A&A...349..236E
Fecha de publicación:
9
1999
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
DENIS is a project to survey the all-southern sky in three wavelength
bands (Gunn-i 0.82 μm; J, 1.25 μm; and K_s, 2.15 μm) with
limiting magnitudes 18.5, 16.5 and 14.0, respectively. The observations
are performed with the 1m-ESO telescope at La Silla (Chile). The DENIS
instrument is made up of a 3-channel camera built of commercially
available detector arrays by the Observatoire de Paris and with major
contributions from other European Institutes, notably: the IAS in
Frascati, the Observatoire de Grenoble, the University of Innsbruck, the
Observatoire de Lyon, and the IAC in Tenerife. The survey is carried out
by observing strips of 30 ° in declination and 12 arcminutes in
Right Ascension with an overlap of 2 arcminutes between consecutive
strips. The survey started at the end of 1995 and is expected to be
completed in 2000. The data are reduced in two consecutive steps, the
first at the Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris and the second at the
Leiden Observatory. The position of a general extracted point source is
provided with an accuracy better than 1 arcsec and its magnitude to
better than 0.1 mag. The data will be made publicly available as soon as
possible after completing the data reduction. The Centre de Donnees
Astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS) is implementing the final databases
and is providing access of the processed and calibrated data to the
worldwide community. The principal investigator of the DENIS project is
N. Epchtein (Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur); scientists and engineers
from seven European countries and from Brazil are involved. (1 data
file).