eso_eso9801a January 13th, 1998
Credit: ESO
This colour image shows objects as faint as 26th magnitude and it illustrates well the performance in deep imaging at good angular resolution with a relatively modest investment in exposure time at a 4m-class ground-based telescope. Of the approximately 500 galaxies detected in this field, the largest fraction are expected to be at redshifts smaller than z = 1 and about 20 percent to have higher redshifts, up to z = 4 and possibly beyond. During this project, a total of 122 CCD frames were obtained in four colours [blue (B), green-yellow (V), red (r) and near-infrared (i-band)] with a total exposure time of no less than 31.5 hours. Total exposure times of 50400, 23400, 23400, 16200 seconds were obtained in the four bands, respectively. The frames cover a 2.3 x 2.3 arcmin 'empty sky' field centered south of the high-redshift quasar QSO BR 1202-0725 (z = 4.7), located just south of the celestial equator. These frames have been combined to produce a 'true' colour image in the sense that 'blue', 'green' and 'red' represent the B-, V- and (r+i)-frames, respectively. This version of the combined image has a high contrast that shows the faintest objects recorded.
Provider: European Southern Observatory
Image Source: https://www.eso.org/public/images/eso9801a/
Curator: European Southern Observatory, Garching bei München, Germany
Image Use Policy: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Detailed color mapping information coming soon...
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