论文标题
银河调查的结束
The End of Galaxy Surveys
论文作者
论文摘要
近一个世纪以来,对星系的成像和光谱调查为我们提供了有关宇宙内容的信息。我们试图通过定义下一个星系调查,而是NIR波长的最终星系调查来定义此类调查的逻辑终点;这将是银河系调查,耗尽用于解决现存问题的信息内容。这样的调查将需要许多技术的不可思议的进步,调查的细节将取决于最早的星系的限制性较差。使用曝光时间计算器,我们定义了用于提取三种科学案例的有用信息的名义调查:暗能量宇宙学,星系进化和超新星。我们定义了缩放关系,以权衡天空背景,望远镜光圈和焦平面大小,以允许对给定区域的特定深度进行调查。为了进行乐观的假设,在一项为期10年的调查中,在L2上运行的2.8亿望远镜具有20度$^2 $的略有解析的焦平面。对于星系演化(利用引力透镜来放大最早的星系)和SN,相同的望远镜就足够了。我们讨论完成最后一项银河调查所需的技术进步。尽管最终的Galaxy调查仍然不在当今的技术范围之外,但我们提出了扩展关系,这表明我们如何朝着耗尽星系形状,位置和颜色中编码的信息内容的目标。
For nearly a century, imaging and spectroscopic surveys of galaxies have given us information about the contents of the universe. We attempt to define the logical endpoint of such surveys by defining not the next galaxy survey, but the final galaxy survey at NIR wavelengths; this would be the galaxy survey that exhausts the information content useful for addressing extant questions. Such a survey would require incredible advances in a number of technologies and the survey details will depend on the as yet poorly constrained properties of the earliest galaxies. Using an exposure time calculator, we define nominal surveys for extracting the useful information for three science cases: dark energy cosmology, galaxy evolution, and supernovae. We define scaling relations that trade off sky background, telescope aperture, and focal plane size to allow for a survey of a given depth over a given area. For optimistic assumptions, a 280m telescope with a marginally resolved focal plane of 20 deg$^2$ operating at L2 could potentially exhaust the cosmological information content of galaxies in a 10 year survey. For galaxy evolution (making use of gravitational lensing to magnify the earliest galaxies) and SN, the same telescope would suffice. We discuss the technological advances needed to complete the last galaxy survey. While the final galaxy survey remains well outside of our technical reach today, we present scaling relations that show how we can progress toward the goal of exhausting the information content encoded in the shapes, positions, and colors of galaxies.