SCIENCE GOALS OF EXTREMELY LARGE TELESCOPES Sandro D’Odorico European Southern Observatory RENCONTRES DE MORIOND Contents and Structures of the Universe.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TheEuropean Extremely Large Telescope. The E-ELT 40-m class telescope: largest optical- infrared telescope in the world. Segmented primary mirror. Active.
Advertisements

European Southern Observatory European Southern Observatory © ESO 2005 Page 1 AO Department Leiden, April 26th 2005 MUSE M ulti U nit S pectroscopic E.
Extremely Large Telescopes and Surveys Mark Dickinson, NOAO.
Oct. 18, Review: Telescopes – their primary purpose… Across the full EM spectrum (radio through very high energy gamma- rays) telescopes fundamentally.
Extragalactic AO Science James Larkin AOWG Strategic Planning Meeting September 19, 2004.
Kinematics/Dynamics  Chemistry/dust  Stellar populations  Searches for z ~ 6-7 « Hot » scientific researches at VLT in cosmology Mass Galaxy formation/gas.
Intro to Stellar Astrophysics L21 The tools of astrophysics ä Virtually all information about the external Universe is received in the form of electromagnetic.
Light and Telescopes Chapter 5. Traditional Telescopes The 4-m Mayall Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory (Arizona)
Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) ‏ Instrumentation Concepts Ground-based Optical Telescopes Keith Taylor (IAG/USP) Aug-Nov, 2008 Aug-Sep, 2008 IAG-USP.
Telescopes (Chapter 6). Based on Chapter 6 This material will be useful for understanding Chapters 7 and 10 on “Our planetary system” and “Jovian planet.
STAR FORMATION STUDIES with the CORNELL-CALTECH ATACAMA TELESCOPE Star Formation/ISM Working Group Paul F. Goldsmith (Cornell) & Neal. J. Evans II (Univ.
KDUST Supernova Cosmology
“ Testing the predictive power of semi-analytic models using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey” Juan Esteban González Birmingham, 24/06/08 Collaborators: Cedric.
X-shooter A Wideband Spectrograph for GRBs
High Redshift Galaxies: Encircled energy performance budget and IFU spectroscopy Claire Max Sept 14, 2006 NGAO Team Meeting.
Telescopes and Astronomical Instruments The 2 main points of telescopes are 1)To make images with as much angular information as possible 2)To gather as.
Quiz 1 Each quiz sheet has a different 5-digit symmetric number which must be filled in (as shown on the transparency, but NOT the same one!!!!!) Please.
The tools. Hot question of Galileo’s time what’s at the centre: earth or sun?
European Southern Observatory Blois, 20 July 2010 From the VLT to ALMA and to the E-ELT.
1 High-z galaxy masses from spectroastrometry Alessio Gnerucci Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Florence 13/12/2009- Obergurgl Collaborators:
How do Astronomers know what they know? Almost everything we know about Astronomy was learned by gathering and studying light from distant sources Properties.
A visible-light AO system for the 4.2 m SOAR telescope A. Tokovinin, B. Gregory, H. E. Schwarz, V. Terebizh, S. Thomas.
Gamma-ray Bursts in the E-ELT era Rhaana Starling University of Leicester.
Cosmology & Large Scale Structure Case, Matthew Colless, GSMT SWG, 4-5 Dec 2002 11 GSMT Science - Case Studies Large Scale Structure and Cosmology Matthew.
OWL Instrument Concept Studies Within the OWL Conceptual Design to be completed by ESO in 3Q 2005, ESO collaborates with external institutes in the study.
1 BDRv3 - November 26, Markus Kissler-Patig E-ELT Programme 1 E-ELT Science Case Markus Kissler-Patig.
Molecular Gas and Dust in SMGs in COSMOS Left panel is the COSMOS field with overlays of single-dish mm surveys. Right panel is a 0.3 sq degree map at.
Tracing Dust in Spiral Galaxies: a Summary Jonathan Davies.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley Telescopes.
This page is intentionally blank. A new view of the Universe II Fred Watson, AAO April 2005 A new view of the Universe II Fred Watson, AAO April 2005.
Chile Sky Background at ESO/la Silla in the Visible and Near IR Leonardo Vanzi -Olivier R. Hainaut European Southern Observatory La Silla - Chile.
Subaru HDS Transmission Spectroscopy of the Transiting Extrasolar Planet HD b The University of Tokyo Norio Narita collaborators Yasushi Suto, Joshua.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
HIGH REDSHIFT GALAXIES and COSMOLOGY SUMMARY. RESOLUTION > (IGM metals, molecules, constants) ( would be fine too – turbulence?
Next generation redshift surveys with the ESO-VLT
ASTR 3010 Lecture 18 Textbook N/A
Preparing for operations with the European Extremely Large Telescope Fernando Comerón.
Surveying the Universe with SNAP Tim McKay University of Michigan Department of Physics Seattle AAS Meeting: 1/03 For the SNAP collaboration.
A global approach to ELT instrument developments J.-G. Cuby for the French ELT WG.
CELT Science Case. CELT Science Justification Process Put together a Science Working Group –Bolte, Chuck Steidel, Andrea Ghez, Mike Brown, Judy Cohen,
Expected progress and break-throughs in ground-based extragalactic astronomy Ralf Bender ESO Council FORS Deep Field.
Galaxy Dynamics Lab 11. The areas of the sky covered by various surveys.
FELT 1 Study of the capability and configuration of a fixed mirror Extremely Large Telescope (FELT) Low cost path to large telescope Primary concern is.
SNAP Calibration Program Steps to Spectrophotometric Calibration The SNAP (Supernova / Acceleration Probe) mission’s primary science.
INFRARED-BRIGHT GALAXIES IN THE MILLENNIUM SIMULATION AND CMB CONTAMINATION DANIEL CHRIS OPOLOT DR. CATHERINE CRESS UWC.
Mega Telescopes of the 21 st Century Evolution in the Ground-Space Synergy Dr. Marc Postman (STScI) & Richard Ellis (Caltech) James Webb Space Telescope.
ALMA Science Examples Min S. Yun (UMass/ANASAC). ALMA Science Requirements  High Fidelity Imaging  Precise Imaging at 0.1” Resolution  Routine Sub-mJy.
Cosmology with ESO telescopes Bruno Leibundgut. Outline Past and current cosmology projects with ESO telescopes Future instrumentation capabilities (interferometry?)
Lecture 13 Light: the Cosmic Messenger Telescopes and Observational Astronomy.
GMT’s Near IR Multiple Object Spectrograph - NIRMOS Daniel Fabricant Center for Astrophysics.
FIRST LIGHT A selection of future facilities relevant to the formation and evolution of galaxies Wavelength Sensitivity Spatial resolution.
Theme 2 AO for Extremely Large Telescopes Center for Adaptive Optics.
Competitive Science with the WHT for Nearby Unresolved Galaxies Reynier Peletier Kapteyn Astronomical Institute Groningen.
Cosmic Dust Enrichment and Dust Properties Investigated by ALMA Hiroyuki Hirashita ( 平下 博之 ) (ASIAA, Taiwan)
Sample expanded template for one theme: Physics of Galaxy Evolution Mark Dickinson.
Quantum Optics meets Astrophysics Frequency Combs for High Precision Spectroscopy in Astronomy T. Wilken, T. Steinmetz, R. Probst T.W. Hänsch, R. Holzwarth,
Page 1 Adaptive Optics in the VLT and ELT era François Wildi Observatoire de Genève Credit for most slides : Claire Max (UC Santa Cruz) Basics of AO.
Galaxy Evolution and WFMOS
The Science Case Hubble Space Telescope CELT+AO HDF.
Observing brown dwarfs in the E-ELT era
Pyramid sensors for AO and co-phasing
CASE-FOMBS Follow-up of One Million Bright Stars
Resolving the black hole - nuclear cluster - spheroid connection
Galaxy Formation and Evolution: Where we are and where we are going.
Theme 2 AO for Extremely Large Telescopes
Black Holes in the Deepest Extragalactic X-ray Surveys
High Resolution Spectroscopy of the IGM: How High
Theme 2 AO for Extremely Large Telescopes
The University of Tokyo Norio Narita
Theme 2 AO for Extremely Large Telescopes
Presentation transcript:

SCIENCE GOALS OF EXTREMELY LARGE TELESCOPES Sandro D’Odorico European Southern Observatory RENCONTRES DE MORIOND Contents and Structures of the Universe La Thuile, Val d’Aosta, Italy; March 18-25, 2006

s.d’odorico_Moriond_1 TELESCOPE GROWTH SINCE GALILEO Telescope size driven by glas technology for primary surface: (lenses-->monolithic mirrors  segmented mirrors) Today, advances in fabrication and control technologies allow EL segmented primary mirrors to be built for affordable costs and with competitive schedules

s.d’odorico_Moriond_2 RAPID GROWTH OF GROUND-BASED ASTRONOMY IN LITTLE MORE THAN A GENERATION USA and European Astronomers surveying sites for 4m telescopes on Atacama Cerro Morado, Chile, ~1962 (ESO archive photo) LaSilla Obs VLT Obs ALMA- a joint ESO-USA project, under construction

s.d’odorico_Moriond_3 THREE ELTs PROJECTS PRESENTLY UNDERGOING CONCEPTUAL – PHASE A STUDIES:  TMT ( Caltech, Univ. California, AURA, CANADA) 30m  European ELT 30-60m  Giant Magellan Telescope (Carnegie+ USA Univ.) 7x8m TMT European ELT GMT Projected cost : 500 – 700 Million EUROS (~ x 1.15 $) Start of operation: 2016

JWST JWST: NIR and Thermal IR cameras and spectrographs ALMA : antenna array for high angular resolution submillimeter observations CONTEXT IN THE 2 ND DECADE OF THE 3 RD MILLENNIUM: ELTs WILL WORK IN SINERGY WITH THE OTHER TWO MAJOR MULTI-SCOPE FACILITIES OF THAT DECADE, ALMA and JWST s.d’odorico_moriond_4

s.d’odorico-moriond-5 Northern Hemisphere ACTUAL COLLECTING AREA OF LARGE TELESCOPES Southern Hemisphere

s.d’odorico_Moriond_6 GAIN FROM AN ELT – OBSERVING REGIMES  More photons from the larger collecting area (  fainter sources within reach, higher S/N ratios for brightest sources) For photon-noise dominated observations, the S/N gain proportional to D at fixed time and flux, the speed (1/ time required to reach given S/N ) to D 2 ). For sky limited observations of point-like sources at natural seeing (0.7 at V, 0.4” FWHM at K), the S/N proportional to D, the speed to D 2.  Higher angular resolution (  = 1.22 / D ) if atmospheric turbulence can be properly corrected with Adaptive Optics putting a significant fraction of the flux of point-like sources within the Airy disk For sky limited observations of point-like, diffraction limited sources the S/N is proportional to D 2, the speed to D 4. Point-like: stars in the Galaxy and in nearby galaxies, SN, GRB Extended: even at the highest z, galaxies up to a few tens of arcsec in size All of the above provided that instruments at least as efficient as those at 10m class telescopes can be built

s.d’odorico_Moriond_7 GAIN FROM AN ELT –THE ROLE OF ADAPTIVE OPTICS  To fully realize the ELT advantage the telescopes must be equipped with efficient AO system-s ahead of the instruments.  The AO system will consist of an array of artificial laser stars, of a number of wavefront sensors for the laser stars and natural stars in the field, 1-2 fast adaptive mirrors in the telescope optical train and/or in a separate system  Current performance predictions from extrapolation of various flavors of AOs being tested at 8-10m telescopes: - on small, central field (< 30”) very good correction at NIR and thermal IR - on selected regions of large fields (10’) moderate correction in NIR - at visual- red wavelengths on axis and on large fields natural seeing improvement through correction of the Ground Layer of the atmosphere

s.d’odorico_Moriond_8 PRIMARY SCIENCE CASES FOR THE ELTs  From the original science drivers - now filtered through the instrument concept studies (OWL, TMT, ELT)  Mostly similar for the different projects, a few differences. With minimal personal bias 1. Detection and Characterization of Giant to Terrestrial Mass Planets 2. Stellar Populations in external galaxies up to Virgo as tracers of the star formation history though the life of the universe 3. Accurate redshift and characterization of SN up to redshift ~2 4. Detailed properties of galaxies and IGM 1 < z < 5 (mass, metallicity, luminosity function, SFR, extinction, tomography and metal content of IGM) 5. Redshift and characterization of galaxies up to z ~10 (reionisation?), GRBs to the same z as probes of IGM 6. Direct measurement of the expansion history of the Universe (E-ELT science case only) 7. Test of the variability of fundamental constants ………………………..………………………..

s.d’odorico_moriond_9 INSTRUMENTS CONCEPTS MOST RELEVANT FOR COSMOLOGY-RELATED STUDIES (TMT, E-ELT) SINGLE OR MULTI INTEGRAL FIELDS, NIR SPECTROGRAPH Science Cases: 3, 4, 5 Requirements: ~5”x5”, 20mas sampling [ single field]; ~20 IFU 2” x 2” over 5’ x 5’ field / Z, J, H, K bands/ R= / throughput (including telescope) > 15%/  limiting magnitude Ks in a few hours integration at S/N=10 AO requirements: EE % within 50 mas at H. Via LTAO for the single field, via MOAO for large field Flavors: IRIS, IRMOS at TMT, WSPEC, MOMSI at E-ELT Challenges: AO performance over large field/ positionable, cryogenic IFU s

s.d’odorico_moriond_10 INSTRUMENTS CONCEPTS MOST RELEVANT FOR COSMOLOGY-RELATED STUDIES (TMT, E-ELT) MULTI OBJECT VISIBLE SPECTROGRAPH Science Cases: 4, mapping of dark halos in ellipticals from GC and PN Requirements: Field>40 sqmin, Spectral range : nm, Resolution = / Throughput >25% including telescope AO requirements: Improvement of seeing median value by 20-30% with GLAO Flavors: WFOS at TMT, WSPEC at E-ELT (?) Challenges: Size and cost of instrument, performance of GLAO over large field, UV coverage HIGH RESOLUTION OPTICAL SPECTROGRAPH Science Cases: 4,5, 6, 7 Requirements: R= , throughput >15% including telescope, AO requirements: Seeing median improvement by GLAO desiderable Flavors: HROS at TMT, CODEX at E-ELT Challenges: Size of instrument and instrument components, cost, schedule, long-term calibration Nr of QSO from SDSS observable in 3hrs at high resolution, for different S/N, as function of telescope diameter (credit TMT MTHR study)

s.d’odorico_Moriond_11 CODEX ( Cosmic Dynamics Experiment ): an instrument for High Resolution Spectroscopy at the ELTs Legacy Science Program: To test the cosmological model by measuring the predicted drift in the redshift of distant sources as a function of time (Sandage,1962) Science Case and Instrument Concept Study carried out by ESO, IoA Cambridge, Obs.Geneve and INAF Trieste ( Pasquini et al. 2005) Magnitude of the effect: H 0 = 70 km/s/Mpc  t = 10 yr; at z=4  = 1 x A  v ~ 5 cm/s redshift

s.d’odorico_Moriond_12 CODEX : Cosmic Dynamics Experiment The idea and the targets: To use ELT huge collecting area and an high resolution spectrograph with a highly accurate and stable wavelength scale to measure from high S/N spectra the shifts in the Ly  forest and metal systems in the direction of bright QSOs over a large time interval (>10 years). Capitalizing and expanding the expertise and methodology acquired with the successful spectroscopic planet searches (HARPS) and Ly  forest studies with UVES at the VLT. The Instrument: High Resolution Spectrograph operating in the spectral range: nm at R = with a stability of ~1cm / s. Improvement of a factor ~10-20 over HARPS short term accuracy. Long term,stable calibration provided by a laser frequency comb tied to an atomic clock (prototype under study)

s.d’odorico_Moriond_18 CODEX : Cosmic Dynamics Experiment Ly  forest Metal lines QSO Absorption Spectrum, z em = 3 Experiment is unique in probing the dynamical effect of dark energy and doing so in the redshift range z = Ly  lines in very large number over the measurable redshift interval Narrow metallic lines can be used at lower redshift. Peculiar motions expected to be 10 times smaller than Hubble flow. Sufficient number of bright QSO

s.d’odorico_Moriond_14 CODEX : Cosmic Dynamics Experiment Simulated result from 30 QSO randomly distributed in the range 2 < z <4.5 S/N = 3000 per Å pixel/epoch (no metal lines used)  t = 20 years Green points: 0.1 z bins, Blue: 0.5 z bins; Red line: Model with H 0 =70 Km/s/Mpc, Ω m =0.3 Ω  =0.7 The cosmic signal is detected at >99% significance SIMULATIONS Pasquini et al 2005

s.d’odorico_Moriond_15_ CODEX : Cosmic Dynamics Experiment “Immediate” science: Testing the Variability of the Fine Structure Constant α =e 2 /hc Fundamental constants supposedly universal and invariable quantities Measured variations would have far reaching consequences on current theories Astronomical observations hold the potential to probe the value in the past (high z) by a measurement of relative shift of pairS of absortion lines with different sensitivies to the variation of α Keck/Hires 143 systems Δα/α=(-0.57±0.11)×10-5 Murphy et al 2004 VLT/UVES 23 systems Δα/α=(+0.6±0.6)×10-6 Chand et al 2004 CODEX accuracy of  /  = will represent an improvement by two order of magnitudes with respect to present measurements