The Stellar Abundances and Galactic Evolution Survey (SAGES) -- -- I. General Description and the First Data Release (DR1)

Abstract

The Stellar Abundances and Galactic Evolution Survey (SAGES) of the northern sky is a specifically-designed multi-band photometric survey aiming to provide reliable stellar parameters with accuracy comparable to those from low-resolution optical spectra. It was carried out with the 2.3-m Bok telescope of Steward Observatory and three other telescopes. The observations in the us and vs passband produced over 36,092 frames of images in total, covering a sky area of 9960 degree2. The median survey completeness of all observing fields for the two bands are of u s=20.4 mag and vs=20.3 mag, respectively, while the limiting magnitudes with signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of 100 are us17 mag and vs18 mag, correspondingly. We combined our catalog with the data release 1 (DR1) of the first of Panoramic Survey Telescope And Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS1, PS1) catalog, and obtained a total of 48,553,987 sources which have at least one photometric measurement in each of the SAGES us and vs and PS1 grizy passbands, which is the DR1 of SAGES and it will be released in our paper. We compare our gri point-source photometry with those of PS1 and found an RMS scatter of 2% in difference of PS1 and SAGES for the same band. We estimated an internal photometric precision of SAGES to be on the order of 1%. Astrometric precision is better than 0.2 based on comparison with the DR1 of Gaia mission. In this paper, we also describe the final end-user database, and provide some science applications.

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