The Blanco Cosmology Survey: Data Acquisition, Processing, Calibration, Quality Diagnostics and Data Release
S. Desai, R. Armstrong, J. J. Mohr, D. R. Semler, J. Liu, E. Bertin,, S. S. Alam, W. A. Barkhouse, G. Bazin, E. J. Buckley-Geer, M. C. Cooper, S., M. Hansen, F. W. High, H. Lin, Y. T. Lin, C.-C. Ngeow, A. Rest, J. Song, D., Tucker, A. Zenteno

TL;DR
The Blanco Cosmology Survey provides extensive optical imaging data of the southern sky, with detailed calibration and data processing, enabling accurate photometric redshifts and supporting cosmological studies of galaxy clusters.
Contribution
This paper presents a comprehensive data acquisition, processing, calibration, and quality assessment pipeline for the BCS, including photometric redshift calibration and data release details.
Findings
Median 10σ galaxy depths in griz are approximately 23.3, 23.4, 23.0, 21.3 mag.
Astrometric accuracy is about 45 milli-arcseconds.
Photometric redshifts achieve scatter δz/(1+z)=0.054 with less than 5% outliers.
Abstract
The Blanco Cosmology Survey (BCS) is a 60 night imaging survey of 80 deg of the southern sky located in two fields: (,)= (5 hr, ) and (23 hr, ). The survey was carried out between 2005 and 2008 in bands with the Mosaic2 imager on the Blanco 4m telescope. The primary aim of the BCS survey is to provide the data required to optically confirm and measure photometric redshifts for Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect selected galaxy clusters from the South Pole Telescope and the Atacama Cosmology Telescope. We process and calibrate the BCS data, carrying out PSF corrected model fitting photometry for all detected objects. The median 10 galaxy (point source) depths over the survey in are approximately 23.3 (23.9), 23.4 (24.0), 23.0 (23.6) and 21.3 (22.1), respectively. The astrometric accuracy relative to the USNO-B survey is…
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