The Carnegie-Irvine Galaxy Survey. I. Overview and Atlas of Optical Images
Luis C. Ho (Carnegie Obs.), Zhao-Yu Li (Peking Univ., Carnegie Obs.),, Aaron J. Barth (UC Irvine), Marc S. Seigar (Univ. Arkansas), and Chien Y., Peng (Carnegie Obs.)

TL;DR
The Carnegie-Irvine Galaxy Survey provides high-quality optical images and comprehensive data for 605 bright southern galaxies, enabling detailed studies of their properties and structures.
Contribution
This paper introduces the CGS, detailing its sample, imaging techniques, data reduction, and the creation of a publicly accessible digital atlas of galaxy images and properties.
Findings
High-resolution optical images with median seeing of 1"
Extensive catalog of galaxy properties including photometry and kinematics
Public release of data products for community use
Abstract
The Carnegie-Irvine Galaxy Survey (CGS) is a long-term program to investigate the photometric and spectroscopic properties of a statistically complete sample of 605 bright (B_T < 12.9 mag), southern (Dec. < 0) galaxies using the facilities at Las Campanas Observatory. This paper, the first in a series, outlines the scientific motivation of CGS, defines the sample, and describes the technical aspects of the optical broadband (BVRI) imaging component of the survey, including details of the observing program, data reduction procedures, and calibration strategy. The overall quality of the images is quite high, in terms of resolution (median seeing 1"), field of view (8.9' X 8.9'), and depth (median limiting surface brightness 27.5, 26.9, 26.4, and 25.3 mag/arcsec2 in the B, V, R, and I bands, respectively). We prepare a digital image atlas showing several different renditions of the data,…
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