The extensive observing field of
the United Kingdom 1.2-m Schmidt Telescope (UKST) of the
Anglo-Australian Observatory (AAO), allows the whole (or significant
fractions) of nearby clusters of galaxies to be imaged
simultaneously. The most sensitive photographic emulsions are required
for such observations as most regions of extragalactic objects are of
very low surface brightness, and techniques such as photographic
amplification or co-addition (Malin 1979) increased the depth to which
such faint features of galaxies could be identified on Schmidt plates.
At the end of the 1980s, increased computing capability and disk
storage facilities allowed for the possibility of digitally co-adding
microdensitometer scans of whole Schmidt plates in order to increase
the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) and enable the detection of fainter
extended features of galaxies, and produce a resultant co-added data
array from which fully quantitative results could be obtained. As a
preliminary project, Kemp & Meaburn (1991a) co-added Automatic Plate
Measuring (APM) machine scans of 8 IIIaJ sky-limited plates of a field
containing the IC 4296 cluster of galaxies, for the purpose of
detecting faint haloes around galaxies and other extensive low surface
brightness features; the scanned area was about . Discoveries were reported in Kemp & Meaburn (1991a,b,
1993, 1994, 1995) and Kemp (1994) and included: a giant halo of
dimensions
kpc around a cD galaxy; tidal tails,
detached filaments and distortions associated with a pair of
interacting galaxies; a warped disk of an edge-on spiral galaxy; a set
of five spectacular trails "emanating" from an apparently
normal-looking lenticular galaxy; a possible "shell" feature
associated with a late-type spiral galaxy; faint optical emission
spatially associated with the radio lobes of IC 4296; and a halo
surrounding an irregular SMC-like galaxy which is almost perfectly
circular in projection. The faintest features were estimated to be at
approximately 27 mag arcsec-2 in the
band, while surface
brightness profiles could be followed to about 1 mag arcsec-2
below this. A full photometric calibration of this data is now being
carried out using Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) and South African
Astronomical Observatory charge-coupled-device (CCD) data.
Recently, the availability of hyper-sensitised Kodak Technical Pan
(TechPan) films (Kodak 1981; Russell et al. 1992) at the UKST has
increased the possibilities for projects studying faint features of
galaxies, at least for the red end of the spectrum. Phillipps &
Parker (1993) carried out tests on two films during the initial trials
of TechPan film at the UKST. These used the same OG590 filter and
plateholder combination employed for normal "OR" R-band IIIaF
exposures. The difference in quality between the films and the IIIaF
plates was easily noticeable visually, the galaxy images on the
TechPan films having much greater clarity, due to the Tech-Pan
emulsion having extremely fine grain size, low rms diffuse granularity
and high resolving power (Phillipps & Parker 1993 and references
within). In good seeing, sky-limited exposures with TechPan films are
reported to go a magnitude or more deeper than those with the
equivalent IIIaF plates. They found a limiting isophote for galaxy
surface photometry of mag arcsec-2 (0.2% of the sky
background) for these films.
The RCA CCD combined with the Anglo-Australian Telescope (3.9 m aperture) would take only 2 minutes to achieve the same S/N (i.e. pre unit area for low surface brightness sources) as obtained in the individual films. However, the greater sensitivity of the CCD, for any project which involves observing extended objects or fields, is more than offset by the cumulative exposure involved in mosaicing a large number of fields. Modern CCDs, on 4 m-class telescopes, typically cover fields of the order of 0.01 square degrees compared with 40 square degrees for UKST plates. In addition, the mosaicing of CCD fields creates problems with matching discontinuities between adjacent fields. Of course, the two types of detector are complementary, in that objects identified as interesting in the co-added array can be targeted for multicolour CCD follow-up observations, which can give information on the stellar populations contained in them etc. and we will be reporting such work in the future.
After the success of the initial digital plate co-addition project of
Kemp & Meaburn (1991a), the Virgo cluster became the natural
follow-up target, as it is the nearest rich cluster of galaxies and
has a high galactic latitude which minimises foreground galactic
contamination. Thirteen sky-limited TechPan R-band films of the
Virgo cluster were used. The area
of each film was digitally scanned and the resultant arrays co-added
as described below, to produce a digitally co-added array of
unprecedented area. New software had to be developed to cope with the
alignment and co-addition of such large data files, and for making a
non-symmetric vignetting correction to the stacked image. With the
co-addition of 13 films galaxy surface photometry is expected to be
possible to below 28 R mag arcsec-2 (0.1% of sky) over large
angular scales. Initial priorities for investigation included: study
of warping in the 20 or so edge-on disk galaxies contained in the
area; giant haloes around elliptical galaxies, including M 87;
comparison of the low surface brightness intra-cluster medium with
maps of the cluster at other wavelengths e.g. X-ray and radio; and a
general study of the amount of baryonic dark matter which is visible
at very low surface brightnesses. In this paper we assume all Virgo
cluster members are at a distance of 17 Mpc (Mould et al. 1995),
resulting in a spatial scale of 5 kpc arcmin-1.
This paper reports the software developed and utilised to produce the co-added array of unprecedented spatial area. Some preliminary results are then displayed and described for a number of galaxies in the field. In some cases e.g. M 87 and M 89 well-known galaxies and previously discovered features are seen with the new clarity of TechPan film and new depth produced by the co-addition. In other cases e.g. NGC 4435/4438 and IC 3481/3481A new low surface brightness features indicating interactions between galaxies or disturbances in the outer parts of galaxies have been discovered. Further papers will report these and follow-up CCD observations in more detail.
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