Artículo
Alma spectroscopic survey in the hubble ultra deep field: survey description
Fecha
2016-12Registro en:
Astrophysical Journal.Open Access.Volume 833, Issue 1.10 December 2016. Article number 67
0004-637X
10.3847/1538-4357/833/1/67
Autor
Walter, Fabian
Decarli, Roberto
Aravena, Manuel
Carilli, Chris
Bouwens, Rychard
Cunha, Elisabete Da
Daddi, Emanuele
Ivison, R.J.
Riechers, Dominik
Smail, Ian
Swinbank, Mark
Weiss, Axel
Anguita, Timo
Assef, Roberto
Bacon, Roland
Bauer, Franz
Bell, Eric F.
Bertoldi, Frank
Chapman, Scott
Colina, Luis
Cortes, Paulo C.
Cox, Pierre
Dickinson, Mark
Elbaz, David
Gónzalez-López, Jorge
Ibar, Edo
Inami, Hanae
Infante, Leopoldo
Hodge, Jacqueline
Karim, Alex
Fevre, Olivier Le
Magnelli, Benjamin
Neri, Roberto
Oesch, Pascal
Ota, Kazuaki
Popping, Gergö
Rix, Hans-Walter
Sargent, Mark
Sheth, Kartik
Wel, Arjen Van Der
Werf, Paul Van Der
Wagg, Jeff
Institución
Resumen
We present the rationale for and the observational description of ASPECS: the ALMA SPECtroscopic Survey in the
Hubble Ultra-Deep Field (UDF), the cosmological deep field that has the deepest multi-wavelength data available.
Our overarching goal is to obtain an unbiased census of molecular gas and dust continuum emission in high-redshift
(z > 0.5) galaxies. The ∼1′ region covered within the UDF was chosen to overlap with the deepest available imaging
from the Hubble Space Telescope. Our ALMA observations consist of full frequency scans in band 3 (84–115 GHz)
and band 6 (212–272 GHz) at approximately uniform line sensitivity (LCO¢ ~ 2 × 109 K km s−1 pc2
), and continuum
noise levels of 3.8 μJy beam−1 and 12.7 μJy beam−1
, respectively. The molecular surveys cover the different
rotational transitions of the CO molecule, leading to essentially full redshift coverage. The [C II] emission line is also
covered at redshifts 6.0 8.0 < <z . We present a customized algorithm to identify line candidates in the molecular
line scans and quantify our ability to recover artificial sources from our data. Based on whether multiple CO lines are
detected, and whether optical spectroscopic redshifts as well as optical counterparts exist, we constrain the most likely
line identification. We report 10 (11) CO line candidates in the 3 mm (1 mm) band, and our statistical analysis shows
that <4 of these (in each band) are likely spurious. Less than one-third of the total CO flux in the low-J CO line
candidates are from sources that are not associated with an optical/NIR counterpart. We also present continuum maps
of both the band 3 and band 6 observations. The data presented here form the basis of a number of dedicated studies
that are presented in subsequent papers.