UVUDF: Ultraviolet Imaging of the Hubble Ultradeep Field with Wide-field Camera 3
Harry I. Teplitz (1), Marc Rafelski (1), Peter Kurczynski (2),, Nicholas A. Bond (3), Norman Grogin (4), Anton M. Koekemoer (4), Hakim Atek, (5), Thomas M. Brown (4), Dan Coe (4), James W. Colbert (1), Henry C., Ferguson (4), Steven L. Finkelstein (6), Jonathan P. Gardner (3)

TL;DR
This paper details a Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet imaging survey of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, focusing on galaxy evolution, star formation, and ionizing radiation escape, with data reduction insights and preliminary results.
Contribution
It introduces a new UV imaging dataset of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, addressing data calibration challenges and demonstrating its utility for studying galaxy evolution at high redshift.
Findings
Number counts of UV-selected galaxies match predictions.
Images support analysis of star-forming clumps at high resolution.
Charge transfer inefficiency significantly affects data quality.
Abstract
We present an overview of a 90-orbit Hubble Space Telescope treasury program to obtain near ultraviolet imaging of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field using the Wide Field Camera 3 UVIS detector with the F225W, F275W, and F336W filters. This survey is designed to: (i) Investigate the episode of peak star formation activity in galaxies at 1<z<2.5; (ii) Probe the evolution of massive galaxies by resolving sub-galactic units (clumps); (iii) Examine the escape fraction of ionizing radiation from galaxies at z~2-3; (iv) Greatly improve the reliability of photometric redshift estimates; and (v) Measure the star formation rate efficiency of neutral atomic-dominated hydrogen gas at z~1-3. In this overview paper, we describe the survey details and data reduction challenges, including both the necessity of specialized calibrations and the effects of charge transfer inefficiency. We provide a stark…
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