학술논문

Euclid preparation: XVI. Exploring the ultra low-surface brightness Universe with Euclid/VIS
Document Type
Working Paper
Author
Borlaff, A. S.Gómez-Alvarez, P.Altieri, B.Marcum, P. M.Vavrek, R.Laureijs, R.Kohley, R.Buitrago, F.Cuillandre, J. C.Duc, P. A.Venancio, L. M. GasparAmara, A.Andreon, S.Auricchio, N.Azzollini, R.Baccigalupi, C.Balaguera-Antolínez, A.Baldi, M.Bardelli, S.Bender, R.Biviano, A.Bodendorf, C.Bonino, D.Bozzo, E.Branchini, E.Brescia, M.Brinchmann, J.Burigana, C.Cabanac, R.Camera, S.Candini, G. P.Capobianco, V.Cappi, A.Carbone, C.Carretero, J.Carvalho, C. S.Casas, S.Castander, F. J.Castellano, M.Castignani, G.Cavuoti, S.Cimatti, A.Cledassou, R.Colodro-Conde, C.Congedo, G.Conselice, C. J.Conversi, L.Copin, Y.Corcione, L.Coupon, J.Courtois, H. M.Cropper, M.Da Silva, A.Degaudenzi, H.Di Ferdinando, D.Douspis, M.Dubath, F.Duncan, C. A. J.Dupac, X.Dusini, S.Ealet, A.Fabricius, M.Farina, M.Farrens, S.Ferreira, P. G.Ferriol, S.Finelli, F.Flose-Reimberg, P.Fosalba, P.Frailis, M.Franceschi, E.Fumana, M.Galeotta, S.Ganga, K.Garilli, B.Gillis, B.Giocoli, C.Gozaliasl, G.Graciá-Carpio, J.Grazian, A.Grupp, F.Haugan, S. V. H.Holmes, W.Hormuth, F.Jahnke, K.Keihanen, E.Kermiche, S.Kiessling, A.Kilbinger, M.Kirkpatrick, C. C.Kitching, T.Knapen, J. H.Kubik, B.Kümmel, M.Kunz, M.Kurki-Suonio, H.Liebing, P.Ligori, S.Lilje, P. B.Lindholm, V.Lloro, I.Mainetti, G.Maino, D.Mansutti, O.Marggraf, O.Markovic, K.Martinelli, M.Martinet, N.Martínez-Delgado, D.Marulli, F.Massey, R.Maturi, M.Maurogordato, S.Medinaceli, E.Mei, S.Meneghetti, M.Merlin, E.Metcalf, R. B.Meylan, G.Moresco, M.Morgante, G.Moscardini, L.Munari, E.Nakajima, R.Neissner, C.Niemi, S. M.Nightingale, J. W.Nucita, A.Padilla, C.Paltani, S.Pasian, F.Patrizii, L.Pedersen, K.Percival, W. J.Pettorino, V.Pires, S.Poncet, M.Popa, L.Potter, D.Pozzetti, L.Raison, F.Rebolo, R.Renzi, A.Rhodes, J.Riccio, G.Romelli, E.Roncarelli, M.Rosset, C.Rossetti, E.Saglia, R.Sánchez, A. G.Sapone, D.Sauvage, M.Schneider, P.Scottez, V.Secroun, A.Seidel, G.Serrano, S.Sirignano, C.Sirri, G.Skottfelt, J.Stanco, L.Starck, J. L.Sureau, F.Tallada-Crespí, P.Taylor, A. N.Tenti, M.Tereno, I.Teyssier, R.Toledo-Moreo, R.Torradeflot, F.Tutusaus, I.Valentijn, E. A.Valenziano, L.Valiviita, J.Vassallo, T.Viel, M.Wang, Y.Weller, J.Whittaker, L.Zacchei, A.Zamorani, G.Zucca, E.
Source
A&A 657, A92 (2022)
Subject
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
Language
Abstract
While Euclid is an ESA mission specifically designed to investigate the nature of Dark Energy and Dark Matter, the planned unprecedented combination of survey area ($\sim15\,000$ deg$^2$), spatial resolution, low sky-background, and depth also make Euclid an excellent space observatory for the study of the low surface brightness Universe. Scientific exploitation of the extended low surface brightness structures requires dedicated calibration procedures yet to be tested. We investigate the capabilities of Euclid to detect extended low surface brightness structure by identifying and quantifying sky background sources and stray-light contamination. We test the feasibility of generating sky flat-fields to reduce large-scale residual gradients in order to reveal the extended emission of galaxies observed in the Euclid Survey. We simulate a realistic set of Euclid/VIS observations, taking into account both instrumental and astronomical sources of contamination, including cosmic rays, stray-light, zodiacal light, ISM, and the CIB, while simulating the effects of the presence of background sources in the FOV. We demonstrate that a combination of calibration lamps, sky flats and self-calibration would enable recovery of emission at a limiting surface brightness magnitude of $\mu=29.5^{+0.08}_{-0.27} $ mag arcsec$^{-2}$ ($3\sigma$, $10\times10$ arcsec$^2$) in the Wide Survey, reaching regions 2 magnitudes deeper in the Deep Surveys. Euclid/VIS has the potential to be an excellent low surface brightness observatory. Covering the gap between pixel-to-pixel calibration lamp flats and self-calibration observations for large scales, the application of sky flat-fielding will enhance the sensitivity of the VIS detector at scales of larger than 1 degree, up to the size of the FOV, enabling Euclid to detect extended surface brightness structures below $\mu=31$ mag arcsec$^{-2}$ and beyond.
Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, Euclid Consortium Key Project, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics