1 / 1

Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope Science Yield

Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope Science Yield. . Michael Levi (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), M. Lampton ( UCBerkeley Space Sciences Lab), and M. Sholl ( UCBerkeley Space Sciences Lab ). WFIRST: Top Recommendation of Astro 2010

remy
Download Presentation

Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope Science Yield

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope Science Yield  Michael Levi (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), M. Lampton (UCBerkeley Space Sciences Lab), and M. Sholl (UCBerkeley Space Sciences Lab) • WFIRST: Top Recommendation of Astro 2010 • Dark energy investigations using Weak Lensing, BAO, and Supernovae • Exoplanetmicrolensing survey in the Galactic Bulge • Wide field guest investigation surveys in the near infrared • New Developments Since Astro 2010 Report • Unobscured aperture shown highly effective at boosting S/N ratio • > Allows higher survey rate for the same aperture: more survey science per year • > Lampton et al., Proc SPIE 7731 (2010) • Focal optical train allows separate focal lengths for imaging and spectroscopy • > Permits high resolution WL survey & EPML with high signal to noise ratio • > Simultaneously delivers wide field slitless spectroscopy with coarser pixel scale • > Sholl et al., Proc SPIE 7731 (2010) and Sholl et al., this AAS conference (2011). • Large focal plane (8x4 MCTs) designed, built, and undergoing space qualification • > Higher pixel count and higher survey rate for the high resolution imager • > Jelinsky et al., this AAS conference (2011) • Four alternative WFIRST Payloads: • Telescope aperture 1.3 or 1.5m unobscured • Pixel scales: imager= 0.18 arcsec; spectrom=0.36 or 0.44 arcsec • Field of view: imager = spectrometer = 0.26 or 0.33 sq degrees simultaneously • Articulated solar panels & 45º front baffle angle for nearly 270 days/year on Bulge • Fully articulated K-band antenna for continuous downlink: 3 ground stations • Orbit: Earth-Sun L2 halo orbit similar to JWST • Weak Lensing Simulation: • > Galaxy sizes & fluxes from zCOSMOS: Leauthaud et al 2008; Jouvel et al 2009 • > Survey rate is set by FoV and exposure time reaching 25th magnitude • BAO Simulation: • > Emission line galaxy fluxes, sizes, and redshifts from Ilbert et al 2005 • > Survey rate chosen to deliver 66% detection at F=2.0e-16 erg/cm2.s • Supernova Simulation: • > Assumes discoveries are given; WFIRST does only the follow-up spectroscopy • > Eight spectra distributed over light curve + one deep spectrum near peak • ExoplanetMicrolensingFoM Scaling: • > Not a simulation; instead scaled from MPF mission projection (ref 6) • > Scaling factor = FoV * Aeff * ObsEffic * Δλ * λ /√NeffPixels • > ObsEffic allows 256 days/year articulated, or 128 days/year fixed panels • > We anticipate that the WFIRST Science Definition Team will do simulations Results Weak Lensing > High survey rate > High galaxy density Exoplanets > Unobscured aperture helps reduce confusion BAO > 2E-16 erg/cm2.s at 66% effic > High survey rate > Can co-observe with WL Supernovae > Can reach redshift z~1.4 > Superior SN yield > Wide λ range and z range help to control systematic errors We gratefully acknowledge the support by the Director, Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy, through contract DE-AC03-76SF00098. Artwork by R.E.Lafever. Night sky image courtesy of NOAO.

More Related