The HST/ACS Coma Cluster Survey: I - Survey Objectives and Design
David Carter, Paul Goudfrooij, Bahram Mobasher, Henry C. Ferguson,, Thomas H. Puzia, Alfonso L. Aguerri, Marc Balcells, Dan Batcheldor, Terry J., Bridges, Jonathan I. Davies, Peter Erwin, Alister W. Graham, Rafael Guzm\'an,, Derek Hammer, Ann Hornschemeier, Carlos Hoyos

TL;DR
The HST ACS Coma Cluster Survey is a deep imaging project aiming to study galaxy populations, structures, and evolution within the Coma cluster, despite partial data loss due to instrument failure.
Contribution
This survey provides a detailed, multi-object imaging dataset of the Coma cluster, focusing on faint galaxies and structural properties, with new insights into cluster galaxy evolution.
Findings
Survey depth reaches g' = 27.6 mag for point sources
90% recovery rate for artificial sources at g' = 27.55 mag
Initial results on dwarf galaxy structures and globular cluster populations
Abstract
We describe the HST ACS Coma cluster Treasury survey, a deep two-passband imaging survey of one of the nearest rich clusters of galaxies, the Coma cluster (Abell 1656). The survey was designed to cover an area of 740 square arcmin in regions of different density of both galaxies and intergalactic medium within the cluster. The ACS failure of January 27th 2007 leaves the survey 28% complete, with 21 ACS pointings (230 square arcmin) complete, and partial data for a further 4 pointings (44 square arcmin). Predicted survey depth for 10 sigma detections for optimal photometry of point sources is g' = 27.6 in the F475W filter, and IC=26.8 mag in F814 (AB magnitudes). Initial simulations with artificially injected point sources show 90% recovered at magnitude limits of g' = 27.55 and IC = 26.65. For extended sources, the predicted 10 sigma limits for a 1 square arcsecond region are g' =…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
