The WIRCam Ultra Deep Survey (WUDS) I. Survey overview and UV luminosity functions at z~5 and z~6
R. Pello, P. Hudelot, N. Laporte, Y. Mellier, H. J. McCracken, M., Balcells, F. Boone, N. Cardiel, J. Gallego, F. Garzon, R. Guzman, J.F. Le, Borgne, M. Prieto, J. Richard, D. Schaerer, L. Tresse, S. Arnouts, J.G. Cuby,, K. Disseau, M. Hayes

TL;DR
The WIRCam Ultra Deep Survey (WUDS) provides deep near-IR data over 400 arcmin^2, enabling detailed analysis of UV luminosity functions at redshifts around 5 and 6, and offering valuable data for studying galaxy evolution and star formation.
Contribution
This paper introduces the WUDS survey, detailing its properties, data quality, and its application in deriving UV luminosity functions at z~5 and 6, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution.
Findings
Consistent small evolution of M* and Phi* between z=5 and 6.
Higher Phi* values at z=6 than previously reported.
Robust near-IR database for galaxy target selection.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to introduce the WIRCam Ultra Deep Survey (WUDS), a near-IR photometric public survey carried out at the CFH Telescope in the field of the CFHTLS-D3 field (Groth Strip). WUDS includes four near-IR bands (Y, J, H and K_s) over a field of view of ~400 arcmin^2. The typical depth of WUDS data reaches between ~26.8 in Y and J, and ~26 in H and K_s (AB, 3 sigma in 1.3 arcsec aperture). The area and depth of this survey were specifically tailored to set strong constraints on the cosmic star formation rate and the luminosity function brighter or around L* in the z~6-10 redshift domain, although these data are also useful for a variety of extragalactic projects.This first paper is intended to present the properties of WUDS: catalog building, completeness and depth, number counts, photometric redshifts, and global properties of the galaxy population. We have also…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
