A Deep, Wide-Field, and Panchromatic View of 47 Tuc and the SMC with HST: Observations and Data Analysis Methods
Jason S. Kalirai, Harvey B. Richer, Jay Anderson, Aaron Dotter,, Gregory G. Fahlman, Brad M. S. Hansen, Jarrod Hurley, Ivan R. King, David, Reitzel, R. Michael Rich, Michael M. Shara, Peter B. Stetson, and Kristin A., Woodley

TL;DR
This study presents an extensive, multi-wavelength HST imaging survey of 47 Tuc and the SMC, producing unprecedented deep color-magnitude diagrams and detailed stellar population data across a wide field.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive observational dataset and analysis method that captures the full stellar populations of 47 Tuc and the SMC with unprecedented depth and coverage.
Findings
Deep, high-resolution color-magnitude diagrams of 47 Tuc extending beyond 30th magnitude.
Resolved low-mass stars in the SMC down to M < 0.2 Msun.
Characterized the complete stellar populations from white dwarfs to main-sequence stars.
Abstract
In HST Cycle 17, we imaged the well known globular star cluster 47 Tucanae for 121 orbits using ACS and both the UVIS and IR channels of WFC3 (GO-11677, PI - H. Richer). This unique data set was obtained to address many scientific questions that demand a very deep, panchromatic, and panoramic view of the cluster's stellar populations. In total, the program obtained over 0.75 Ms of imaging exposure time with the three HST cameras, over a time span of 9 months in 2010. The primary ACS field was imaged in the two broadband filters F606W and F814W filters, at 13 orientations, for all 121 orbits. The parallel WFC3 imaging provides a panchromatic (0.4 - 1.7 micron) and contiguous imaging swath over a 250 degree azimuthal range at impact radii of 6.5 -- 17.9 pc in 47 Tuc. This imaging totals over 60 arcmin^2 in area and utilizes the F390W and F606W broadband filters on WFC3/UVIS and the F110W…
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.
