DESI Bright Galaxy Survey: Final Target Selection, Design, and Validation
ChangHoon Hahn, Michael J. Wilson, Omar Ruiz-Macias, Shaun Cole, David, H. Weinberg, John Moustakas, Anthony Kremin, Jeremy L. Tinker, Alex Smith,, Risa H. Wechsler, Steven Ahlen, Shadab Alam, Stephen Bailey, David Brooks,, Andrew P. Cooper, Tamara M. Davis, Kyle Dawson

TL;DR
The DESI Bright Galaxy Survey aims to map over 10 million galaxies at low redshift with high efficiency and accuracy, providing critical data for understanding dark energy and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
This paper presents the final target selection, survey design, and validation methods for the DESI Bright Galaxy Survey, ensuring optimal data quality and scientific utility.
Findings
BGS targets have stellar contamination <1%.
Achieves >80% fiber assignment efficiency.
Redshift success rates >95% regardless of observing conditions.
Abstract
Over the next five years, the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) will use 10 spectrographs with 5000 fibers on the 4m Mayall Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory to conduct the first Stage-IV dark energy galaxy survey. At , the DESI Bright Galaxy Survey (BGS) will produce the most detailed map of the Universe during the dark energy dominated epoch with redshifts of >10 million galaxies over 14,000 deg. In this work, we present and validate the final BGS target selection and survey design. From the Legacy Surveys, BGS will target a magnitude-limited sample (BGS Bright); a fainter sample, color-selected to have high redshift efficiency (BGS Faint); and a smaller low-z quasar sample. BGS will observe these targets using exposure times, scaled to achieve uniform completeness, and visit each point on the footprint three times. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
