GOODS Publications
GOODS scientific publications:
Early results from the GOODS collaboration appeared
in a
Special Issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters (2004 January 10, v600, number 2, part 2).
GOODS dissertations:
GOODS overview and data papers:
The following papers describe the GOODS project and data sets.
Users of GOODS data are kindly requested to reference whichever
papers are appropriate for the data they are using.
- GOODS project description:
Dickinson, M., Giavalisco, M., and the GOODS Team, 2003,
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey, in "The Mass of Galaxies at Low and High Redshift,"
Proceedings of the ESO Workshop held in Venice, Italy, 24-26 October 2001; eds. R. Bender & A. Renzini, p. 324.
Also, astro-ph/0204213.
- Hubble Space Telescope ACS data:
Giavalisco et al., 2004, ApJ, 600, L93, The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey: Initial Results from
Optical and Near-Infrared Imaging. This paper describes the HST/ACS survey strategy,
observations, and data reduction. Some of the ground-based data are also described here.
- Spitzer Space Telescope data:
- Dickinson et al., in preparation: This paper will describe the Spitzer observing
strategy, data-taking, data reduction, and data products, and will probably also
include initial IRAC photometric catalogs.
- Chary et al., in preparation: This paper will describe the Spitzer MIPS 24um
source catalogs and their properties.
- ESO/FORS2 GOODS-S spectroscopy:
Future papers in this series will present additional data taken in subsequent observing seasons.
- ESO/ISAAC GOODS-S infrared imaging:
Vandame et al. (in preparation) will describe the ESO VLT/ISAAC infrared imaging
data, reductions, and catalogs.
- Subaru+KPNO GOODS-N imaging:
Capak, P., et al., 2004, AJ, 127, 180,
A Deep Wide-Field, Optical, and Near-Infrared Catalog of a Large Area around the Hubble Deep Field North.
This paper describes ground-based optical and near-infrared imaging of the GOODS-N field
taken with the Subaru SuPrimeCam, the KPNO Mayall 4m MOSAIC camera, and the UH 88".
Last updated 28 July 2005.
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© 2005 The Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. All Rights Reserved.