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SKYSURF: Constraints on Zodiacal Light and Extragalactic Background Light through Panchromatic HST All-Sky Surface-Brightness Measurements: I. Survey Overview and Methods

Authors :
Rogier A. Windhorst
Timothy Carleton
Rosalia O’Brien
Seth H. Cohen
Delondrae Carter
Rolf Jansen
Scott Tompkins
Richard G. Arendt
Sarah Caddy
Norman Grogin
Anton Koekemoer
John MacKenty
Stefano Casertano
Luke J. M. Davies
Simon P. Driver
Eli Dwek
Alexander Kashlinsky
Scott J. Kenyon
Nathan Miles
Nor Pirzkal
Aaron Robotham
Russell Ryan
Haley Abate
Hanga Andras-Letanovszky
Jessica Berkheimer
John Chambers
Connor Gelb
Zak Goisman
Daniel Henningsen
Isabela Huckabee
Darby Kramer
Teerthal Patel
Rushabh Pawnikar
Ewan Pringle
Ci’mone Rogers
Steven Sherman
Andi Swirbul
Kaitlin Webber
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

We give an overview and describe the rationale, methods, and testing of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Archival Legacy project "SKYSURF." SKYSURF uses HST's unique capability as an absolute photometer to measure the ~0.2-1.7 $\mu$m sky surface brightness (SB) from 249,861 WFPC2, ACS, and WFC3 exposures in ~1400 independent HST fields. SKYSURF's panchromatic dataset is designed to constrain the discrete and diffuse UV to near-IR sky components: Zodiacal Light (ZL; inner Solar System), Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs; outer Solar System), Diffuse Galactic Light (DGL), and the discrete plus diffuse Extragalactic Background Light (EBL). We outline SKYSURF's methods to: (1) measure sky-SB levels between its detected objects; (2) measure the integrated discrete EBL, most of which comes from AB$\simeq$17-22 mag galaxies; and (3) estimate how much diffuse light may exist in addition to the extrapolated discrete galaxy counts. Simulations of HST WFC3/IR images with known sky-values and gradients, realistic cosmic ray (CR) distributions, and star plus galaxy counts were processed with nine different algorithms to measure the "Lowest Estimated Sky-SB" (LES) in each image between the discrete objects. The best algorithms recover the inserted LES values within 0.2% when there are no image gradients, and within 0.2-0.4% when there are 5-10% gradients. SKYSURF requires non-standard re-processing of these HST images that includes restoring the lowest sky-level from each visit into each drizzled image. We provide a proof of concept of our methods from the WFC3/IR F125W images, where any residual diffuse light that HST sees in excess of the Kelsall et al. (1998) Zodiacal model prediction does not depend on the total object flux that each image contains. This enables us to present our first SKYSURF results on diffuse light in Carleton et al. (2022).<br />Comment: Accepted to AJ; see accompanying paper Carleton et al. 2022: arXiv:2205.06347. Comments welcome!

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6810f66037321a8913175ca9ef574f22
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2205.06214