The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series (Jan 2023)

The Dark Energy Camera Plane Survey 2 (DECaPS2): More Sky, Less Bias, and Better Uncertainties

  • Andrew K. Saydjari,
  • Edward F. Schlafly,
  • Dustin Lang,
  • Aaron M. Meisner,
  • Gregory M. Green,
  • Catherine Zucker,
  • Ioana Zelko,
  • Joshua S. Speagle,
  • Tansu Daylan,
  • Albert Lee,
  • Francisco Valdes,
  • David Schlegel,
  • Douglas P. Finkbeiner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/aca594
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 264, no. 2
p. 28

Abstract

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Deep optical and near-infrared imaging of the entire Galactic plane is essential for understanding our Galaxy’s stars, gas, and dust. The second data release of the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) Plane Survey extends the five-band optical and near-infrared survey of the southern Galactic plane to cover 6.5% of the sky, ∣ b ∣ ≤ 10°, and 6° > ℓ > −124°, complementary to coverage by Pan-STARRS1. Typical single-exposure effective depths, including crowding effects and other complications, are 23.5, 22.6, 22.1, 21.6, and 20.8 mag in g , r , i , z , and Y bands, respectively, with around 1″ seeing. The survey comprises 3.32 billion objects built from 34 billion detections in 21,400 exposures, totaling 260 hr open shutter time on the DECam at Cerro Tololo. The data reduction pipeline features several improvements, including the addition of synthetic source injection tests to validate photometric solutions across the entire survey footprint. A convenient functional form for the detection bias in the faint limit was derived and leveraged to characterize the photometric pipeline performance. A new postprocessing technique was applied to every detection to debias and improve uncertainty estimates of the flux in the presence of structured backgrounds, specifically targeting nebulosity. The images and source catalogs are publicly available at http://decaps.skymaps.info/ .

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