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Galaxy evolution within the Kilo-Degree Survey

Authors :
Tortora, C.
Napolitano, N. R.
La Barbera, F.
Roy, N.
Radovich, M.
Getman, F.
Brescia, M.
Cavuoti, S.
Capaccioli, M.
Longo, G.
collaboration, the KiDS
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The ESO Public Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) is an optical wide-field imaging survey carried out with the VLT Survey Telescope and the OmegaCAM camera. KiDS will scan 1500 square degrees in four optical filters (u, g, r, i). Designed to be a weak lensing survey, it is ideal for galaxy evolution studies, thanks to the high spatial resolution of VST, the good seeing and the photometric depth. The surface photometry have provided with structural parameters (e.g. size and S\'ersic index), aperture and total magnitudes have been used to derive photometric redshifts from Machine learning methods and stellar masses/luminositites from stellar population synthesis. Our project aimed at investigating the evolution of the colour and structural properties of galaxies with mass and environment up to redshift $z \sim 0.5$ and more, to put constraints on galaxy evolution processes, as galaxy mergers.<br />Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear on the refereed Proceeding of the "The Universe of Digital Sky Surveys" conference held at the INAF--OAC, Naples, on 25th-28th november 2014, to be published on Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings, edited by Longo, Napolitano, Marconi, Paolillo, Iodice

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1507.00736
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19330-4_19