A dataset provided by the European Space Agency

Name ISOGAL7P
Title ISOCAM SURVEY OF THE INNER GALAXY COMPLETION OF THE ISOGAL 7-15MICRON SURVEY
URL

http://nida.esac.esa.int/nida-sl-tap/data?RETRIEVAL_TYPE=OBSERVATION&PRODUCT_LEVEL=ALL&obsno=480005910

DOI https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-t2nspnj
Author OMONT, ALAIN
Description > in this proposal, more time is being requested for aomont.isogalin > this proposal requests an upgrade from priority 3 for aomont.isogalin isogal is the first detailed mid-ir imaging survey of the inner galaxy, tracing galactic structure and stellar populations. it combines 7-15mu data with the ijk denis survey which has already completely observed the isogal fields. we have three main goals: trace the large scale disk structure using primarily red giant (gm) old stars; detect many dusty young stars and map the ism star formation regions through diffuse emission and extinction; study the stellar populations and the structure of the bulge. the central regions of the milky way contain the most extreme stellar cluster known, the majority of the stellar mass, most of the spiral structure, much of the star formation, the disk bar, the mysterious central bulge, the molecular ring, and many examples of rare and extreme stellar and dynamical states. most of these are confused in projection and are heavily obscured even in the near-ir. multi-colour mid-ir data are essential to analyse these features. isogal quantifies the distribution of the stellar populations, especially of young dusty, old (gm), and agb, stars, of low luminosity star-formation regions, uchii regions, and both diffuse and dense interstellar material. the 70 hours allocated and successfully observed have, as proposed, been devoted almost exclusively to 15mu observations, to maximise originality with respect to ground near-ir (half our 15mu sources seem to be dusty ysos not detectable at ijk) and avoid saturation. our first isogal results combined with denis provide adequate photometry and extinction on gms at several kpc, as well as two major results beyond our expectations: we see even more young, low-mass stars and very many more extremely high-extinction clouds than expected. besides the many major goals already achievable with these 1...5mu data alone, the addition of a 2nd mid-ir color (7mu), now proved technically feasible, will be a decisive gain : increase the sample of detected distant gms by a factor 5, essential to reliably trace galactic structure; improve study of diffuse emission; confirm and characterise the many dusty ysos only detected at 15mu; improve the reliability of characterisation of all stars, and the extinction.
Instrument CAM01 , CAM04
Temporal Coverage 1997-02-25T12:45:57Z/1997-09-22T21:04:43Z
Version 1.0
Mission Description The Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) was the world's first true orbiting infrared observatory. Equipped with four highly-sophisticated and versatile scientific instruments, it was launched by Ariane in November 1995 and provided astronomers world-wide with a facility of unprecedented sensitivity and capabilities for a detailed exploration of the Universe at infrared wavelengths.
Creator Contact https://support.cosmos.esa.int/iso/
Date Published 1999-07-07T00:00:00Z
Publisher And Registrant European Space Agency
Credit Guidelines European Space Agency, OMONT, ALAIN, 1999, ISOGAL7P, 1.0, European Space Agency, https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-t2nspnj