The One-hundred-deg^2 DECam Imaging in Narrowbands (ODIN): Survey Design and Science Goals
Kyoung-Soo Lee, Eric Gawiser, Changbom Park, Yujin Yang, Francisco, Valdes, Dustin Lang, Vandana Ramakrishnan, Byeongha Moon, Nicole Firestone,, Stephen Appleby, Maria Celeste Artale, Moira Andrews, Franz E. Bauer, Barbara, Benda, Adam Broussard, Yi-Kuan Chiang, Robin Ciardullo

TL;DR
ODIN is a large-scale survey using DECam with custom narrow-band filters to study Lyman-alpha emitters and cosmic web structures during Cosmic Noon, enabling insights into galaxy formation and evolution at high redshifts.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design and science goals of the ODIN survey, a novel large-area narrow-band imaging project targeting key epochs of galaxy evolution.
Findings
Survey will identify over 100,000 LAEs at z=2.4, 3.1, and 4.5.
Enables detection of extended Lya blobs and protoclusters.
Provides data to study the evolution of galaxy clustering and dark matter halos.
Abstract
We describe the survey design and science goals for ODIN (One-hundred-deg^2 DECam Imaging in Narrowbands), a NOIRLab survey using the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) to obtain deep (AB~25.7) narrow-band images over an unprecedented area of sky. The three custom-built narrow-band filters, N419, N501, and N673, have central wavelengths of 419, 501, and 673 nm and respective full-widthat-half-maxima of 7.2, 7.4, and 9.8 nm, corresponding to Lya at z=2.4, 3.1, and 4.5 and cosmic times of 2.8, 2.1, and 1.4 Gyr, respectively. When combined with even deeper, public broad-band data from Hyper Suprime-Cam, DECam, and in the future, LSST, the ODIN narrow-band images will enable the selection of over 100,000 Lya-emitting (LAE) galaxies at these epochs. ODIN-selected LAEs will identify protoclusters as galaxy overdensities, and the deep narrow-band images enable detection of highly extended Lya blobs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
