These technical papers describe various aspects of the technial operation of the original Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and the SDSS-II's SEGUE and Supernova surveys. This list of papers is sorted by the technical system that the paper describes.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Technical Summary
York, D.G., Adelman, J., Anderson, J.E., et al., 2000. AJ, 120(3), 1579-1587.
The 2.5 m Telescope of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Gunn, J.E., Siegmund, W.A., Mannery, E.J., Owen, R.E., et al., 2006. AJ, 131(4), 2332-2359.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric Camera
Gunn, J.E., Carr, M.A., Rockosi, C.M., Sekiguchi, M., et al., 1998. AJ, 116(6), 3040-3081.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric System
Fukugita, M., Ichikawa, T., Gunn, J.E., Doi, M., Shimasaku, K., and Schneider, D.P. 1996. AJ, 111(4), 1748-1756.
A Photometricity and Extinction Monitor at the Apache Point Observatory
Hogg, D.W., Finkbeiner, D.P., Schlegel, D.J., and Gunn, J.E. 2001. AJ, 122(4), 2129-2138.
SDSS Data Management and Photometric Quality Assessment
Ivezic, Z., Lupton, R.H., Schlegel, D., et al. 2004. AN, 325(6),583-589.
The u'g'r'i'z' Standard-Star System
Smith, J.A., Tucker, D.L., Kent, S.M., et al. 2002. AJ, 123(4), 2121-2144.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Monitor Telescope Pipeline
Tucker, D., Kent, S., Richmond, M.W., et al. 2006. AN, 327(9), 821-843.
An Improved Photometric Calibration of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Imaging Data
Padmanabhan, N., et al. 2008. ApJ, 674(2), 1217-1233.
Astrometric Calibration of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Pier, J. R., et al., 2003. AJ, 125(3), 1559-1579.
If you are studying any objects near the magnitude limit of the survey, you should mention that SDSS uses asinh magnitudes, and reference the paper defining this mangitude system:
Lupton, R.H., Gunn, J.E., and Szalay, A.S. 1999. AJ, 118(3), 1406-1410.
If you are dealing with the quasar or galaxy samples, you should reference the corresponding target selection papers from the list below.
Spectroscopic Target Selection in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: The Main Galaxy Sample
Strauss, M.A., Weinberg, D.H., Lupton, R.H. et al. 2002. AJ, 124(3), 1810-1824.
Spectroscopic Target Selection for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: The Luminous Red Galaxy Sample
Eisenstein, D.J., Annis, J., Gunn, J.E., et al. 2001. AJ, 122(5), 2267-2280.
Spectroscopic Target Selection in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: The Quasar Sample
Richards, G.T., Fan, X., Newberg, H., et al. 2002. AJ, 123(6), 2945-2975.
If the tiling procedure is at all important to your analysis, you should also reference the tiling paper.
Blanton, M.R., Lin, H., Lupton, R.H., Maley, F.M., Young, N., Zehavi, I., and Loveday, J. 2003. AJ, 125(4), 2276-2286.
The SDSS Supernova Survey was one of three components of SDSS-II, an extension of the original SDSS. The Supernova Survey was a time-domain survey, involving repeat imaging of the same region of sky every other night, weather permitting. The primary scientific motivation was to detect and measure light curves for several hundred supernovae, to help constrain cosmological models in a redshift range where more data were needed.
The Supernova Survey repeatedly imaged the SDSS Southern Equatorial trip (Stripe 82), an area of sky 2.5° wide by 120° long (-1.25 ≤ dec ≤ 1.25, 310 < RA < 60). Every night, weather permitting, for three months in each of three years (Sept/Oct/Nov 2005-2007), the SDSS camera imaged that area. All these images are publicly available as FITS files from the SDSS SDSS Data Archive Server, and catalogs derived from the images are available from the Stripe 82 Catalog Archive Server. The SNANA supernova analysis package used by the team is publicly available on the SDSS Supernova Survey website.
Over the course of the three years, the SDSS Supernova Survey discovered and measured multi-band lightcurves for about 500 spectroscopically confirmed Type Ia supernovae in the redshift range z = 0.05-0.4. Additional light curves are available for a few hundred more Type Ia supernovae that could not be spectroscopically confirmed as supernovae, but for which host galaxy redshifts are known. The survey also discovered about 80 spectroscopically confirmed core-collapse supernovae (supernova types Ib/c and II).
For technical details of the SDSS supernova survey, see the technical papers below.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Technical Summary
Frieman, J.A., Bassett, B., Becker, A., et al. 2008. AJ, 135(1), 338-347.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Search Algorithm and Follow-Up Observations
Sako, M., Bassett, B., Becker, A., et al. 2008. AJ, 135(1), 348-373.
SEGUE collected images and spectra of stars in the Milky Way to create a detailed three-dimensional map of our Galaxy. SEGUE obtained images of 3,200 square degrees of sky and spectra of 240,000 stars in the galactic disk and spheroid. Analysis of the spectra revealed the age, composition and phase space distribution of stars within the various Galactic components. More information can be found on the SEGUE web site.
The complete SEGUE dataset was part of the SDSS's Data Release 7, and additional images and spectra taken as part of the SDSS-III's SEGUE extension are available as a part of Data Release 8.
For technical details of the SEGUE survey, see the technical papers below.
The SEGUE Stellar Parameter Pipeline. I. Description and Comparison of Individual Methods
Lee, Y. S., Beers, T.C., Sivarani, T., et al. 2008. AJ, 136(5), 2022-2049.
The SEGUE Stellar Parameter Pipeline. II. Validation with Galactic Globular and Open Clusters
Lee, Y. S., Beers, T.C., Sivarani, T., et al. 2008. AJ, 136(5), 2050-2069.
Allende-Prieto, C., Sivarani, T., Beers, T.C., et al. 2008. AJ, 136(5), 2070-2082.