The Co-Ordinated Radio 'N' Infrared Survey for High-mass star formation
Welcome to the website for the Co-Ordinated Radio 'N' Infrared Survey for High-mass star formation or CORNISH. This project is the radio continuum part of a series of multi-wavelength surveys of the Galactic Plane that focus on the northern GLIMPSE region (l=10o to 65o, |b|<1o), completed by the SPITZER space telescope in the mid-IR. The same region is being covered by a new near-IR survey by the UKIDSS consortium and will also be part of a submillimetre continuum survey at the JCMT.
CORNISH aims to deliver a complementary, uniform, sensitive, high resolution radio survey to address key questions in high-mass star formation as well as many other areas of astrophysics.
The survey has covered the 110 square degrees of the northern GLIMPSE region in 400 hours with the Very Large Array in B configuration at 5 GHz. This yields 1 arcsecond resolution, which matches well to the resolution of GLIMPSE and UKIDSS and is required to overcome crowding in the Galactic Plane and in massive star forming regions. The noise level varies between 0.2 - 0.4 mJy/beam, which is sufficient to detect UCHII regions right across the Galaxy.
CORNISH constitutes one of the VLA Large Proposal projects (Project Code AH884). Observations were completed in February 2008 and the team is currently refining the data processing and source detection algorithms in preparation for a full release of the data to the community.
Initial Data Release
NEW! Pipeline-reduced image data are now available to the community at large from the Data Products page. This shared risk data release.
Participating Institutions in Alphabetical Order
The University of Leeds and the University of Manchester (JBCA) in the UK lead a team drawn from 12 other institutions worldwide.















