Large sky surveys are of fundamental importance to astronomy. They provide an overall description of the universe and the generic properties of its many different constituents. Furthermore, complete and unbiased surveys are an indispensable tool in creating well defined samples of particular objects.
In the radio regime there is a long history of ever more sensitive and accurate large sky surveys over a wide range of frequencies. Both the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) and the Very Large Array (VLA) are currently dedicating substantial parts of their observing time to conducting new large-scale radio surveys. During the next few years, exploitation of these surveys should produce an enormous amount of new information about the radio universe.
The Westerbork Northern Sky Survey (WENSS) is a new low-frequency
radio survey, designed to cover the whole sky north of declination
at a wavelength of 92 cm (325 MHz), and about a quarter
of this region, concentrated at high galactic latitudes, at a wavelength
of 49 cm (609 MHz), to a limiting flux density of approximately 18 mJy
(
) and 15 mJy respectively. The products from WENSS are maps
and source lists for all four Stokes parameters (I, Q, U, V). Maps will be
produced at a resolution (FWHM of the restoring beam) of
at 92 cm and
at 49 cm. The positional accuracy for strong sources
is 1.5'' at both 92 cm and 49 cm. WENSS will distribute its maps in a
standard
format. These maps we call frames.
To carry out this survey in a reasonable amount of time, WENSS
utilizes the mosaicing capability of the WSRT.
Exploiting this technique, a pattern of 80 evenly spaced fields is
observed at regular intervals over several 12
hour syntheses with different array configurations.
In this way it is possible to sufficiently sample the visibilities for
all 80 fields and thus
reconstruct a map of the sky that is many times larger than the field of
view of the WSRT ( HPBW at 92 cm). These maps are referred to
as mosaics.
Frequency (MHz)
WENSS 87GB NVSS FIRST 6C 7C 8C
609 325 4850 1400 1400 151 151 38
Sky coverage
Sky Area (sr) 0.7 3.1 6.1 10.3 3.1 2.8 4 0.8
Lim. Flux density 18 15 18 2.5 1 300 150 1000
( , mJy)
Source density ( )
Resolution
45''
5''
Positional uncertainty 1.5'' 10'' 1'' 0.1''
5''-10'' 1'' 30''
(strong sources)
Polarization I, Q, U, V I I, Q, U I I I I
References
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
WENSS is complemented by two other radio surveys with comparable
beam-sizes, that are currently underway; the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS)
at 1.4 GHz (Condon et al. 1993) and the 151 MHz 7C survey
(McGilchrist
et al. 1990; Lacy et al. 1994; Visser et al. 1995). These surveys will,
when combined, provide well defined spectral information on an estimated
radio-sources. The 4.85 GHz NRAO-Greenbank survey (Condon et al.\
1989; Becker et al. 1991; Gregory & Condon 1991), recently updated
(Gregory et al. 1995), the 6C survey at 151 MHz
(Hales et al. 1993), and the
8C survey at 38 MHz (Rees 1990; Lacy et al. 1992) provide additional
information for a subset of these sources. The high resolution VLA
survey at 21 cm of the north galactic cap, the Faint Images of the Radio
Sky at Twenty cm (FIRST, Becker et al. 1995), will provide
accurate positions and morphological information for a large number of
WENSS sources in this region. Table 1 (click here) summarizes the
characteristics of WENSS and several other major radio surveys.
The most important additional information that WENSS provides compared to previous radio surveys are:
In Sect. 2 of this paper we start with an introduction to the observational techniques used in producing WENSS. Included in this section are a discussion of the mosaicing concept (2.1), the observational set-up (2.2), the data reduction (2.3), the frame production (2.4), and the source extraction (2.5).
The first WENSS fields to be observed (in the spring of 1991) covered a 570 square degree area centered on the north ecliptic pole: the mini-survey. We present results for the total intensity data from this region. The mini-survey is described in Sect. 3. An overview of the region is presented (3.1), followed by a description of the source list (3.2). This source list is only available in electronic form. A correction to the measured flux densities of faint sources is discussed (3.3, 4), followed by a description of the errors (3.5) and the completeness (3.6).
Plots for a selection of sources characterized by an exceptional morphology (Appendix A) are given at the end of the paper.