Extending the Nearby Galaxy Heritage with WISE: First Results from the WISE Enhanced Resolution Galaxy Atlas
T. H. Jarrett, F. Masci, C. W. Tsai, S. Petty, M. Cluver, Roberto J., Assef, D. Benford, A. Blain, C. Bridge, E. Donoso, P. Eisenhardt, B., Koribalski, S. Lake, James D. Neill, M. Seibert, K. Sheth, S. Stanford, E., Wright

TL;DR
This paper introduces the WISE Enhanced Resolution Galaxy Atlas (WERGA), which uses super-resolution processing of WISE data to produce detailed images and catalogs of large nearby galaxies, enabling comprehensive studies of their properties and evolution.
Contribution
The paper presents the first results of WERGA, demonstrating super-resolution imaging of galaxies and combining multi-wavelength data to analyze galaxy properties, a novel approach for WISE data.
Findings
Achieved spatial resolution comparable to Spitzer-IRAC.
Derived star formation rates from mid-infrared and UV data.
Constructed a comprehensive galaxy catalog for local universe studies.
Abstract
The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mapped the entire sky at mid-infrared wavelengths 3.4, 4.6, 12 and 22 microns. The mission was primarily designed to extract point sources, leaving resolved and extended sources unexplored. We have begun a dedicated WISE Enhanced Resolution Galaxy Atlas (WERGA) project to fully characterize large, nearby galaxies and produce a legacy image atlas and source catalogue. Here we demonstrate the first results of the project for a sample of 17 galaxies, chosen to be of large angular size, diverse morphology, color, stellar mass and star formation. It includes many well-studied galaxies, such as M51, M81, M83, M87, M101, IC342. Photometry and surface brightness decomposition is carried out after special super-resolution processing, achieving spatial fidelity similar to that of Spitzer-IRAC. We present WISE, Spitzer and GALEX photometric and…
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