Introducing the LBT Imaging of Galactic Halos and Tidal Structures (LIGHTS) survey. A preview of the low surface brightness Universe to be unveiled by LSST
Ignacio Trujillo, Mauro D'Onofrio, Dennis Zaritsky, Alberto, Madrigal-Aguado, Nushkia Chamba, Giulia Golini, Mohammad Akhlaghi, Zahra, Sharbaf, Raul Infante-Sainz, Javier Roman, Carlos Morales-Socorro, David J., Sand, Garreth Martin

TL;DR
The LIGHTS survey uses the LBT to capture ultra-deep images of nearby galaxy halos and satellites, revealing structures and faint objects that inform galaxy formation theories and the missing satellites problem.
Contribution
This paper introduces the LIGHTS survey, demonstrating its capability to detect low surface brightness features and faint satellites beyond the Local Group, comparable to future LSST observations.
Findings
Detected an asymmetric stellar halo around NGC1042.
Identified low-mass satellites with very faint surface brightness.
Results align with LambdaCDM predictions for galaxy halos.
Abstract
We present the first results of the LBT Imaging of Galaxy Haloes and Tidal Structures (LIGHTS) survey. LIGHTS is an ongoing observational campaign with the 2x8.4m Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) aiming to explore the stellar haloes and the low surface brightness population of satellites down to a depth of muV~31 mag/arcsec^2 (3 sigma in 10"x10" boxes) of nearby galaxies. We simultaneously collected deep imaging in the g and r Sloan filters using the Large Binocular Cameras (LBCs). The resulting images are 60 times (i.e. ~4.5 mag) deeper than those from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and they have characteristics comparable (in depth and spatial resolution) to the ones expected from the future Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). Here we show the first results of our pilot programme targeting NGC1042 (an M33 analogue at a distance of 13.5 Mpc) and its surroundings. The depth of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
