论文标题
麦哲伦恒星历史调查的第二个数据发布(Smash)
The Second Data Release of the Survey of the MAgellanic Stellar History (SMASH)
论文作者
论文摘要
大小的麦哲伦云(LMC和SMC)是银河系中最大的卫星星系,足够近,可以详细探索其结构和地层历史。对麦哲伦恒星历史(Smash)的调查是一项社区黑暗能源相机(DECAM)调查,使用$ \ sim $ 50晚上对麦哲伦云进行调查,以超过$ \ sim $ \ sim $ \ sim $ 2400度$^2 $以$ \ sim $ \ sim $ 20%的$ 20%(但在中央区域中有稳定的覆盖率)和$ 24 $ 24 $ \ u \ ucgr $ \ u \ ucr $ \ u \ u \ u \ ucr $ \ u \ ucr $ \ ucr $ \ u \ ucr $ \ u \ u \ ucr $ \ usgr $ 24 Smash的主要目标是绘制云层的扩展恒星外围,并揭示其复杂的相互作用和积聚历史,并得出中央区域的空间分辨的星形形成历史,并创建过去恒星形成的“电影”。在这里,我们宣布第二个Smash公共数据发布(DR2),其中包含所有197个完全校准的DECAM领域,包括中央区域的主体领域。 DR2数据可通过NSF的国家光学粉红外天文学研究实验室托管的Astro数据实验室获得。我们重点介绍了使用Smash DR2数据的三个科学案例,并将在未来发表:(1)LMC的初步恒星形成历史; (2)使用公民科学家寻找麦哲伦星团; (3)使用DECAM $ u $ band的麦哲伦云星的光度法金属。
The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC) are the largest satellite galaxies of the Milky Way and close enough to allow for a detailed exploration of their structure and formation history. The Survey of the MAgellanic Stellar History (SMASH) is a community Dark Energy Camera (DECam) survey of the Magellanic Clouds using $\sim$50 nights to sample over $\sim$2400 deg$^2$ centered on the Clouds at $\sim$20% filling factor (but with contiguous coverage in the central regions) and to depths of $\sim$24th mag in $ugriz$. The primary goals of SMASH are to map out the extended stellar peripheries of the Clouds and uncover their complicated interaction and accretion history as well as to derive spatially-resolved star formation histories of the central regions and create a "movie" of their past star formation. Here we announce the second SMASH public data release (DR2), which contains all 197 fully-calibrated DECam fields including the main body fields in the central regions. The DR2 data are available through the Astro Data Lab hosted by the NSF's National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory. We highlight three science cases that make use of the SMASH DR2 data and will be published in the future: (1) preliminary star formation histories of the LMC; (2) the search for Magellanic star clusters using citizen scientists; and, (3) photometric metallicities of Magellanic Cloud stars using the DECam $u$-band.