학술논문

Dynamic Observing and Tiling Strategies for the DESI Legacy Surveys
Document Type
article
Source
The Astronomical Journal. 160(2)
Subject
Space Sciences
Physical Sciences
Affordable and Clean Energy
Sky surveys
Astronomical methods
astro-ph.IM
Astronomical and Space Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Astronomical sciences
Particle and high energy physics
Language
Abstract
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Legacy Surveys, a combination of three ground-based imaging surveys, have mapped 16,000 deg2 in three optical bands (g, r, and z) to a depth 1-2 mag deeper than the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Our work addresses one of the major challenges of wide-field imaging surveys conducted at ground-based observatories: the varying depth that results from varying observing conditions at Earth-bound sites. To mitigate these effects, the Legacy Surveys (the Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey, or DECaLS; the Mayall z-band Legacy Survey, or MzLS; and the Beiijing-Arizona Sky Survey, or BASS) employed a unique strategy to dynamically adjust the exposure times as rapidly as possible in response to the changing observing conditions. We present the tiling and observing strategies used by the first two of these surveys. We demonstrate that the tiling and dynamic observing strategies jointly result in a more uniform-depth survey that has higher efficiency for a given total observing time compared with the traditional approach of using fixed exposure times.