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We report the orbital distribution of the Trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) discovered during the High Ecliptic Latitude (HiLat) extension of the Canada-France Ecliptic Plane Survey (CFEPS), conducted from June 2006 to July 2009. The HiLat component was designed to address one of the shortcomings of ecliptic surveys (like CFEPS), their lack of sensitivity to high-inclination objects. We searched 701~deg$^2$ of sky ranging from 12$^circ$ to 85$^circ$ ecliptic latitude and discovered lKBO TNOs, with inclinations between 15$^circ$ to 104$^circ$. This survey places a very strong constraint on the inclination distribution of the hot component of the classical Kuiper Belt, ruling out any possibility of a large intrinsic fraction of highly inclined orbits. Using the parameterization of citet{2001AJ....121.2804B}, the HiLat sample combined with CFEPS imposes a width $14^circ le sigma le 15.5^circ$, with a best match for $sigma = 14.5^circ$. HiLat discovered the first retrograde TNO, 2008~KV$_{42}$, with an almost polar orbit with inclination 104$^circ$, and (418993), a scattering object with perihelion in the region of Saturns influence, with $a sim 400$~AU and $i = 68^circ$.
We report 250 GHz (1.2 mm) observations of a sample of 20 QSOs at redshifts 5.8<z<6.5 from the the Canada-France High-z Quasar Survey (CFHQS), using the Max-Planck Millimeter Bolometer (MAMBO) array at the IRAM 30-metre telescope. A rms sensitivity <
The Canada-France Imaging Survey (CFIS) will map the northern high Galactic latitude sky in the $u$-band (CFIS-u, 10,000$, {rm deg^2}$) and in the $r$-band (CFIS-r, 5,000$, {rm deg^2}$), enabling a host of stand-alone science investigations, and prov
We present imaging and spectroscopic observations for six quasars at z>5.9 discovered by the Canada-France High-z Quasar Survey (CFHQS). The CFHQS contains sub-surveys with a range of flux and area combinations to sample a wide range of quasar lumino
We launched the VLBI Ecliptic Plane Survey program in 2015. The goal of this program is to find all compact sources within 7.5 degrees of the ecliptic plane which are suitable as phase calibrators for anticipated phase referencing observations of spa
We present here the results of the first part of the VLBI Ecliptic Plane Survey (VEPS) program. The goal of the program is to find all compact sources within $7.5^circ$ of the ecliptic plane which are suitable as calibrators for anticipated phase ref