The Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSEII) imaged longitudes ±10◦ of the central region of the Galaxy. The latitude coverage is ±1◦ from |l| =10◦to 5◦, ±1.5◦ from |l| =5◦to 2◦, and ±2◦ from |l| =2◦to 0◦. GLIMPSEII coverage excludes the Galactic center region l=±1◦, b=±0.75◦ observed by the GALCEN GO program (PID=3677). GLIMPSEII had two-epoch coverage for a total of three visits on the sky. The observations consisted of two 1.2 second integrations at each position in the first epoch of data taking (September 2005) and a single 1.2 second integration at each position six months later (April 2006).
The GLIMPSEII Epoch 2 More Reliable Archive (GLMIIEp2MRA) consists of higher reliability point sources than the Archive. It was produced for the single visit epoch 2 only source lists to provide a higher reliability source list than the Archive. No highly reliable Catalog is produced for this dataset since it requires a source be detected twice in one band. The sources in the More Reliable Archive have the same stringent criteria as the Catalog except two detections are not required in a single band. Two detections in adjacent bands are required (the “1” can include the 2MASS Ks band); for example one detection in band 1 and one detection in band 2.
The GLIMPSE Proper project re-images about 43 square degrees of the Galactic center to measure the proper motions of millions of sources within 5 degrees of the Galactic center over the last decade.
The GLIMPSE Proper project re-images about 43 square degrees of the Galactic center to measure the proper motions of millions of sources within 5 degrees of the Galactic center over the last decade.
The Spitzer Mapping of the Outer Galaxy (SMOG; Carey et al. 2008) project mapped a 21 square degree area with IRAC & MIPS (l=102d to 109d , b=0d to 3d) of the Outer Galaxy. The SMOG IRAC data have been processed by the Wisconsin GLIMPSE IRAC pipeline. There are two types of source lists: a high reliability point source Catalog and a more complete point source Archive.
The Spitzer Mapping of the Outer Galaxy (SMOG; Carey et al. 2008) project mapped a 21 square degree area with IRAC & MIPS (l=102d to 109d , b=0d to 3d) of the Outer Galaxy. The SMOG IRAC data have been processed by the Wisconsin GLIMPSE IRAC pipeline. There are two types of source lists: a high reliability point source Catalog and a more complete point source Archive.
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) aims to unite extremely deep observations from NASA's Great Observatories (Spitzer, Hubble and Chandra), ESA's Herschel and XMM-Newton, and the most powerful ground-based facilities. The aim is to survey the distant universe to the faintest flux limits across the broadest range of wavelengths.
GOODS Spitzer IRS 16 micron observations surveyed 150 square arcminutes in each of the two GOODS fields (North and South), to an average 3 sigma depth of 40 and 65 microJy, respectively. These sources have been cross-correlated with Spitzer, Chandra, and HST measurements in other bands.
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) aims to unite extremely deep observations from NASA's Great Observatories (Spitzer, Hubble and Chandra), ESA's Herschel and XMM-Newton, and the most powerful ground-based facilities. The aim is to survey the distant universe to the faintest flux limits across the broadest range of wavelengths.
This catalog provides a list of sources for the MIPS 24 micron imaging of the GOODS-N field. It is limited to flux densities greater than 80 microJy, where the source extraction is highly complete and reliable.
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) aims to unite extremely deep observations from NASA's Great Observatories (Spitzer, Hubble and Chandra), ESA's Herschel and XMM-Newton, and the most powerful ground-based facilities. The aim is to survey the distant universe to the faintest flux limits across the broadest range of wavelengths.
GOODS Spitzer IRS 16 micron observations surveyed 150 square arcminutes in each of the two GOODS fields (North and South), to an average 3 sigma depth of 40 and 65 microJy, respectively. These sources have been cross-correlated with Spitzer, Chandra, and HST measurements in other bands.
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) aims to unite extremely deep observations from NASA's Great Observatories (Spitzer, Hubble and Chandra), ESA's Herschel and XMM-Newton, and the most powerful ground-based facilities. The aim is to survey the distant universe to the faintest flux limits across the broadest range of wavelengths.
This catalog provides a list of sources for the MIPS 24 micron imaging of the GOODS-S field. It is limited to flux densities greater than 80 microJy, where the source extraction is highly complete and reliable.
The Galactic Plane Infrared Polarization Survey (GPIPS) covers 76 sq. deg. of the first Galactic quadrant midplane, 18<l<56 deg and -1<b<+1 deg, in H-band (1.6 micron) linear polarimetry to reveal the plane-of-the-sky orientation of the magnetic field in diffuse and denser atomic and molecular clouds. The Survey consists of 3234 overlapping 10x10 arcmin fields observed using the Mimir instrument on the 1.8 m Perkins telescope.
The unique star data file (Clemens et al. 2020) collects all GPIPS photometry and polarimetry and all matching stellar data appropriate to each GPIPS star. The unique star file contains entries for 13,861,329 GPIPS stars.