The Gemini Deep Deep Survey: I. Introduction to the Survey, Catalogs and Composite Spectra
/ Authors
R. Abraham, K. Glazebrook, P. McCarthy, D. Crampton, R. Murowinski, I. Jørgensen, K. Roth, I. Hook, S. Savaglio, Hsiao-Wen Chen
and 2 more authors
/ Abstract
The Gemini Deep Deep Survey (GDDS) is an ultra-deep (K<20.6 mag, I<24.5 mag) redshift survey targeting galaxies in the"redshift desert"between 1<z<2. The primary goal of the survey is to constrain the space density at high redshift of evolved high-mass galaxies. We obtained 309 spectra in four widely-separated 30 arcmin^2 fields using the Gemini North telescope and the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS). The spectra define a one-in-two sparse sample of the reddest and most luminous galaxies near the I-K vs. I color-magnitude track mapped out by passively evolving galaxies in the redshift interval 0.8<z<1.8. This sample is augmented by a one-in-seven sparse sample of the remaining high-redshift galaxy population. Typical exposures times were 20-30 hours per field (in Nod&Shuffle mode), and the resulting spectra are the deepest ever obtained. In this paper we present our sample of 309 spectra, along with redshifts, identifications of spectral features, and photometry. The infrared selection underlying the survey means that the GDDS is observing not only star-forming galaxies, as in most high-redshift galaxy surveys, but also quiescent evolved galaxies. The median redshift of the whole GDDS sample is z=1.1. Together with the data and catalogs, we present a summary of the criteria for selecting the GDDS fields, the rationale behind our mask designs, an analysis of the completeness of the survey, and a description of the data reduction procedures used. All data from the GDDS are publicly available. (ABRIDGED)
DOI: 10.1086/383557