Science Results
SDSS distribution of local galaxies |
The original Sloan Digital Sky Survey and SDSS-II have a rich scientific legacy. Discoveries made with SDSS data have included:
- Detection of the baryon acoustic peak in the clustering of galaxies
- Mapping of streams of stars left from galaxy mergers in the Milky Way, as well as the discovery of many new dwarf companion galaxies of the Milky Way
- The most distant quasars known
- Cool brown dwarfs, the largest sample of spectroscopically confirmed white dwarfs (by far) and many other classes of unusual stars
- Detecting extreme kinematical and chemical populations of the Galactic bulge
The American Museum of Natural History hosts a nice video overview of SDSS science accessible to the general public.
The SDSS data have been made public in a series of data releases; the most recent is the Tenth Data Release, which includes the complete SDSS/SDSS-II data. It includes links to the flat files in the Science Archive Server and to the catalogs and databases in the Catalog Archive Server.
SDSS-III builds on the legacy of the SDSS and SDSS-II to generate high-quality scientific data and to make important new discoveries. SDSS-III has been designed to maximize understanding of three scientific themes:
- Dark energy and cosmological parameters
- The structure, dynamics and chemical evolution of the Milky Way
- The architecture of planetary systems
For a detailed description of the SDSS-III's science program, see the Project Description, available as a PDF document. Also there is a recent overview paper now published in Astronomical Journal (see also the arXiv preprint).