The ALHAMBRA survey: reliable morphological catalogue of 22 051 early- and late-type galaxies
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Povié, M.; Huertas-Company, M.; López Aguerri, José Alfonso; Márquez, I.; Masegosa, J.; Husillos, C.; Molino, A.; Cristóbal-Hornillos, D.; Perea, J.; Benítez, N.; Olmo, A. del; Fernández Soto, Alberto
Fecha
2013-11Derechos
© 2013 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publicado en
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 435, iss.4, Pp.3444-3461 (2013)
Editorial
Oxford University Press
Royal Astronomical Society
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Palabras clave
Surveys
Galaxies: fundamental parameters
Galaxies: statistics
Resumen/Abstract
Advanced Large Homogeneous Area Medium Band Redshift Astronomical (ALHAMBRA) is photometric survey designed to trace the cosmic evolution and cosmic variance. It covers a large area of ∼4 deg2 in eight fields, where seven fields overlap with other surveys, allowing us to have complementary data in other wavelengths. All observations were carried out in 20 continuous, medium band (30 nm width) optical and 3 near-infrared (JHK) bands, providing the precise measurements of photometric redshifts. In addition, morphological classification of galaxies is crucial for any kind of galaxy formation and cosmic evolution studies, providing the information about star formation histories, their environment and interactions, internal perturbations, etc. We present a morphological classification of >40 000 galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey. We associate to every galaxy a probability to be early type using the automated Bayesian code GALSVM. Despite of the spatial resolution of the ALHAMBRA images (∼1 arcsec), for 22 051 galaxies, we obtained the contamination by other type of less than 10 per cent. Of those, 1640 and 10 322 galaxies are classified as early- (down to redshifts ∼0.5) and late-type (down to redshifts ∼1.0), respectively, with magnitudes F613W ≤ 22.0. In addition, for magnitude range 22.0 < F613W ≤ 23.0, we classified other 10 089 late-type galaxies with redshifts ≤1.3. We show that the classified objects populate the expected regions in the colour–mass and colour–magnitude planes. The presented data set is especially attractive given the homogeneous multiwavelength coverage available in the ALHAMBRA fields, and is intended to be used in a variety of scientific applications. The low-contamination catalogue (<10 per cent) is made publicly available with this paper.
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