The GALEX mission is performing imaging and spectroscopic surveys of the sky at Ultraviolet wavelengths, and providing unprecedented
sky maps in two UV bands, far-UV and near-UV, and catalogs of UV sources. I will describe the major surveys accomplished so
far, and results in investigating the nature of the UV sources. The UV surveys, linked to a multi-wavelength archive, offer
great sensitivity to detect and characterize several classes of astrophysical objects, such as low-redshift QSOs, star-forming
galaxies, and white dwarfs (WD) in the Milky Way. Efforts towards obtaining a significant census of WDs from GALEX imaging
data are described in particular. A dedicated, deep survey of nearby galaxies provides a snapshot of their recent star formation,
shedding new light on the process of star formation and its modalities in different environments and conditions. Deep GALEX
data revealed young stellar populations in extreme outskirts of spiral galaxies, previously thought to be stable against star
formation given their low density. UV measurements for millions of nearby and distant galaxies map the history and probe the
causes of star formation in the Universe over the redshift range
z=0–2.
Keywords Astronomical data bases: surveys - Astronomical data bases: catalogs - Stars: white dwarfs - Stars: early type - Galaxy: stellar content - Galaxies: evolution - Quasars: general - Ultraviolet: general