The MUSE 3D view of the Hubble Deep Field South
R. Bacon (1), J. Brinchmann (2), J. Richard (1), T. Contini (3,4), A., Drake (1), M. Franx (2), S. Tacchella (5), J. Vernet (6), L. Wisotzki (7), J., Blaizot (1), N. Bouch\'e (3,4), R. Bouwens (2), S. Cantalupo (5), C.M., Carollo (5), D. Carton (2), J. Caruana (7)

TL;DR
This paper presents deep 3D spectroscopic observations of the Hubble Deep Field South using MUSE, revealing thousands of sources, including many new redshifts and emission-line galaxies, demonstrating MUSE's capabilities for detailed galaxy analysis.
Contribution
First comprehensive 3D spectroscopic survey of HDF-S with MUSE, significantly increasing known redshifts and unveiling new emission-line galaxies, showcasing MUSE's advanced capabilities.
Findings
Measured redshifts for 189 sources, greatly expanding known data.
Discovered 26 new Lya emitting galaxies not seen in previous images.
Identified 17 galaxy groups within the field.
Abstract
We observed the Hubble Deep Field South with the new panoramic integral field spectrograph MUSE that we built and just commissioned at the VLT. The data cube resulting from 27 hours of integration covers one arcmin^2 field of view at an unprecedented depth with a 1 sigma emission line surface brightness limit of 1x erg/s/cm/arcsec and contains ~90,000 spectra. We present the combined and calibrated data cube, and we perform a first-pass analysis of the sources detected in the HDF-S imaging. We measured the redshifts of 189 sources up to a magnitude F814W = 29.5, increasing by more than an order of magnitude the number of known spectroscopic redshifts in this field. We also discovered 26 Lya emitting galaxies which are not detected in the HST WFPC2 deep broad band images. The intermediate spectral resolution of 2.3{\AA} allows us to separate resolved asymmetric Lya…
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