VICS82: the VISTA-CFHT Stripe 82 near-infrared survey
Abstract
We present the VISTA-CFHT Stripe 82 (VICS82) survey: a near-infrared (J+Ks) survey covering 150 square degrees of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) equatorial Stripe 82 to an average depth of J=21.9 AB mag and Ks=21.4 AB mag (80% completeness limits; 5-sigma point source depths are approximately 0.5 mag brighter). VICS82 contributes to the growing legacy of multi-wavelength data in the Stripe 82 footprint. The addition of near-infrared photometry to the existing SDSS Stripe 82 coadd ugriz photometry reduces the scatter in stellar mass estimates to delta log(Mstellar)~0.3 dex for galaxies with Mstellar>109Msun at z~0.5, and offers improvement compared to optical-only estimates out to z~1, with stellar masses constrained within a factor of approximately 2.5. When combined with other multi-wavelength imaging of the Stripe, including moderate-to-deep ultraviolet (GALEX), optical and mid-infrared (Spitzer IRAC) coverage, as well as tens of thousands of spectroscopic redshifts, VICS82 gives access to approximately 0.5 Gpc3 of comoving volume. Some of the main science drivers of VICS82 include (a) measuring the stellar mass function of Lstar galaxies out to z~1; (b) detecting intermediate redshift quasars at 2<z<3.5; (c) measuring the stellar mass function and baryon census of clusters of galaxies, and (d) performing optical/near-infrared-cosmic microwave background lensing cross-correlation experiments linking stellar mass to large-scale dark matter structure. Here we define and describe the survey, highlight some early science results and present the first public data release, which includes an SDSS-matched catalogue as well as the calibrated pixel data itself.
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