The missing light of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Alejandro Borlaff, Ignacio Trujillo, Javier Rom\'an, John E. Beckman,, M. Carmen Eliche-Moral, Ra\'ul Infante-S\'ainz, Alejandro Lumbreras, Rodrigo, Takuro Sato Mart\'in de Almagro, Carlos G\'omez-Guijarro, Mar\'ia Cebri\'an,, Antonio Dorta, Nicol\'as Cardiel, Mohammad Akhlaghi

TL;DR
This paper introduces ABYSS, a novel pipeline that enhances the detection of low surface brightness structures in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, revealing faint galaxy outskirts previously missed.
Contribution
The authors develop and demonstrate a new reduction pipeline, ABYSS, that improves background subtraction and recovers faint low surface brightness features in ultra-deep astronomical images.
Findings
Recovered low surface brightness light equivalent to a 19-20 mag source.
Successfully detected extended low brightness structures in ultra-deep surveys.
Produced publicly available high-quality mosaics of the HUDF.
Abstract
The Hubble Ultra Deep field (HUDF) is the deepest region ever observed with the Hubble Space Telescope. With the main objective of unveiling the nature of galaxies up to , the observing and reduction strategy have focused on the properties of small and unresolved objects, rather than the outskirts of the largest objects, which are usually over-subtracted. We aim to create a new set of WFC3/IR mosaics of the HUDF using novel techniques to preserve the properties of the low surface brightness regions. We created ABYSS: a pipeline that optimises the estimate and modelling of low-level systematic effects to obtain a robust background subtraction. We have improved four key points in the reduction: 1) creation of new absolute sky flat fields, 2) extended persistence models, 3) dedicated sky background subtraction and 4) robust co-adding. The new mosaics successfully recover…
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