Authors: David T. Hill, Lee S. Kelvin, Simon P. Driver, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Ewan Cameron, Nicholas Cross, Ellen Andrae, Ivan K. Baldry, Steven P. Bamford, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Sarah Brough, Christopher J. Conselice, Simon Dye, Andrew M. Hopkins, Jochen Liske, Jon Loveday, Peder Norberg, John A. Peacock, Scott M. Croom, Carlos S. Frenk, Alister W. Graham, D. Heath Jones, Konrad Kuijken, Barry F. Madore, Robert C. Nichol, Hannah R. Parkinson, Steven Phillipps, Kevin A. Pimbblet, Cristina C. Popescu, Matthew Prescott, Mark Seibert, Rob G. Sharp, Will J. Sutherland, Daniel Thomas, Richard J Tuffs and Elco van Kampen
Abstract: In order to generate credible 0.1-2 micron SEDs, the GAMA project requires many Gigabytes of imaging data from a number of instruments to be re-processed into a standard format. In this paper we discuss the software infrastructure we use, and create self-consistent ugrizYJHK photometry for all sources within the GAMA sample. Using UKIDSS and SDSS archive data, we outline the pre-processing necessary to standardise all images to a common zeropoint, the steps taken to correct for seeing bias across the dataset, and the creation of Gigapixel-scale mosaics of the three 4x12 deg GAMA regions in each filter. From these mosaics, we extract source catalogues for the GAMA regions using elliptical Kron and Petrosian matched apertures. We also calculate Sérsic magnitudes for all galaxies within the GAMA sample using SIGMA, a galaxy component modelling wrapper for GALFIT 3. We compare the resultant photometry directly, and also calculate the r band galaxy LF for all photometric datasets to highlight the uncertainty introduced by the photometric method. We find the following. (1) Changing the object detection threshold has a minor effect on the best-fitting Schechter parameters of the overall population: M* ± 0.055 mag, α ± 0.014, Φ* ± 0.0005 h3 Mpc-3. (2) An offset between datasets that use Kron or Petrosian photometry regardless of the filter. (3) The decision to use circular or elliptical apertures causes an offset in M* of 0.20 mag. (4) The best-fitting Schechter parameters from total-magnitude photometric systems (such as SDSS modelmag or Sérsic magnitudes) have a steeper faint-end slope than photometry dependent on Kron or Petrosian magnitudes. (5) Our Universe's total luminosity density, when calculated using Kron or Petrosian r-band photometry, is underestimated by at least 15%.