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The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers

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The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers. / Ramasawmy, Joanna; Klaassen, Pamela; Cicone, Claudia et al.
Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007 . SPIE, 2022.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNAbstract

Harvard

Ramasawmy, J, Klaassen, P, Cicone, C, Mroczkowski, T, Chen, C-C, Cornish, T, da Cunha, E, Hatziminaoglou, E, Johnstone, D, Liu, D, Perrott, Y, Schimek, A, Stanke, T, Wedemeyer, S, Zmuidzinas, J (ed.) & Gao, J-R (ed.) 2022, The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers. in Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007 . SPIE, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 17/07/22.

APA

Ramasawmy, J., Klaassen, P., Cicone, C., Mroczkowski, T., Chen, C.-C., Cornish, T., da Cunha, E., Hatziminaoglou, E., Johnstone, D., Liu, D., Perrott, Y., Schimek, A., Stanke, T., Wedemeyer, S., Zmuidzinas, J. (Ed.), & Gao, J.-R. (Ed.) (2022). The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers. In Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007 SPIE.

Vancouver

Ramasawmy J, Klaassen P, Cicone C, Mroczkowski T, Chen CC, Cornish T et al. The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers. In Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007 . SPIE. 2022

Author

Ramasawmy, Joanna ; Klaassen, Pamela ; Cicone, Claudia et al. / The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers. Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007 . SPIE, 2022.

Bibtex

@inbook{aff79ed4ef0a4c0f819026c652b79806,
title = "The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers",
abstract = "The Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) is a concept for a 50m class single-dish telescope that will provide high sensitivity, fast mapping of the (sub-)millimeter sky. Expected to be powered by renewable energy sources, and to be constructed in the Atacama desert in the 2030s, AtLAST{\textquoteright}s suite of up to six state of-the-art instruments will take advantage of its large field of view and high throughput to deliver efficient continuum and spectroscopic observations of the faint, large-scale emission that eludes current facilities. The AtLAST design study project is currently supported by a Horizon 2020 grant aimed at studying the governance, telescope design, site selection, telescope operations, sustainable energy supply, and science drivers of the future AtLAST observatory. With quantified and specific science goals, we can begin to place technical specifications on the telescope and its instrumentation. As a first step in this process, we conducted a consultation on potential AtLAST science with the global (sub-)millimeter astrophysics community. The consultation involved nearly 100 scientists based in 22 countries, and the resulting 28 use cases indicate the breadth of transformational science that such a high-throughput facility could make possible: from exploring the prebiotic molecular chemistry of comets in our own Solar System, detecting the extended, diffuse cold gas in the circumgalactic medium of both our own and distant galaxies, to detailed measurements of the thermal, kinetic, and relativistic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect and mapping of large-scale structure. Already these science cases define some core requirements for AtLAST{\textquoteright}s instrumentation: wide bandwidths, multichroic observations, high spectral resolution, fast mapping and a large field of view. Further refinement of these is planned over the course of the current EU-funded project, resulting in detailed case studies of the telescope and instrumentation requirements needed by the community to deliver a next-generation submillimeter observing facility.",
keywords = "telescopes, astronomy",
author = "Joanna Ramasawmy and Pamela Klaassen and Claudia Cicone and Tony Mroczkowski and Chian-Chou Chen and Thomas Cornish and {da Cunha}, Elisabete and Evanthia Hatziminaoglou and Doug Johnstone and Daizhong Liu and Yvette Perrott and Alice Schimek and Thomas Stanke and Sven Wedemeyer and Jonas Zmuidzinas and Jian-Rong Gao",
year = "2022",
month = aug,
day = "31",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007",
publisher = "SPIE",
note = "SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation ; Conference date: 17-07-2022 Through 22-07-2022",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The Atacama Large aperture Submillimetre Telescope: key science drivers

AU - Ramasawmy, Joanna

AU - Klaassen, Pamela

AU - Cicone, Claudia

AU - Mroczkowski, Tony

AU - Chen, Chian-Chou

AU - Cornish, Thomas

AU - da Cunha, Elisabete

AU - Hatziminaoglou, Evanthia

AU - Johnstone, Doug

AU - Liu, Daizhong

AU - Perrott, Yvette

AU - Schimek, Alice

AU - Stanke, Thomas

AU - Wedemeyer, Sven

A2 - Zmuidzinas, Jonas

A2 - Gao, Jian-Rong

PY - 2022/8/31

Y1 - 2022/8/31

N2 - The Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) is a concept for a 50m class single-dish telescope that will provide high sensitivity, fast mapping of the (sub-)millimeter sky. Expected to be powered by renewable energy sources, and to be constructed in the Atacama desert in the 2030s, AtLAST’s suite of up to six state of-the-art instruments will take advantage of its large field of view and high throughput to deliver efficient continuum and spectroscopic observations of the faint, large-scale emission that eludes current facilities. The AtLAST design study project is currently supported by a Horizon 2020 grant aimed at studying the governance, telescope design, site selection, telescope operations, sustainable energy supply, and science drivers of the future AtLAST observatory. With quantified and specific science goals, we can begin to place technical specifications on the telescope and its instrumentation. As a first step in this process, we conducted a consultation on potential AtLAST science with the global (sub-)millimeter astrophysics community. The consultation involved nearly 100 scientists based in 22 countries, and the resulting 28 use cases indicate the breadth of transformational science that such a high-throughput facility could make possible: from exploring the prebiotic molecular chemistry of comets in our own Solar System, detecting the extended, diffuse cold gas in the circumgalactic medium of both our own and distant galaxies, to detailed measurements of the thermal, kinetic, and relativistic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect and mapping of large-scale structure. Already these science cases define some core requirements for AtLAST’s instrumentation: wide bandwidths, multichroic observations, high spectral resolution, fast mapping and a large field of view. Further refinement of these is planned over the course of the current EU-funded project, resulting in detailed case studies of the telescope and instrumentation requirements needed by the community to deliver a next-generation submillimeter observing facility.

AB - The Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) is a concept for a 50m class single-dish telescope that will provide high sensitivity, fast mapping of the (sub-)millimeter sky. Expected to be powered by renewable energy sources, and to be constructed in the Atacama desert in the 2030s, AtLAST’s suite of up to six state of-the-art instruments will take advantage of its large field of view and high throughput to deliver efficient continuum and spectroscopic observations of the faint, large-scale emission that eludes current facilities. The AtLAST design study project is currently supported by a Horizon 2020 grant aimed at studying the governance, telescope design, site selection, telescope operations, sustainable energy supply, and science drivers of the future AtLAST observatory. With quantified and specific science goals, we can begin to place technical specifications on the telescope and its instrumentation. As a first step in this process, we conducted a consultation on potential AtLAST science with the global (sub-)millimeter astrophysics community. The consultation involved nearly 100 scientists based in 22 countries, and the resulting 28 use cases indicate the breadth of transformational science that such a high-throughput facility could make possible: from exploring the prebiotic molecular chemistry of comets in our own Solar System, detecting the extended, diffuse cold gas in the circumgalactic medium of both our own and distant galaxies, to detailed measurements of the thermal, kinetic, and relativistic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect and mapping of large-scale structure. Already these science cases define some core requirements for AtLAST’s instrumentation: wide bandwidths, multichroic observations, high spectral resolution, fast mapping and a large field of view. Further refinement of these is planned over the course of the current EU-funded project, resulting in detailed case studies of the telescope and instrumentation requirements needed by the community to deliver a next-generation submillimeter observing facility.

KW - telescopes

KW - astronomy

UR - https://www.spiedigitallibrary.org/conference-proceedings-of-spie/12190/2627505/The-Atacama-Large-Aperture-Submillimetre-Telescope-key-science-drivers/10.1117/12.2627505.full

M3 - Abstract

BT - Proc. SPIE 12190, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, 1219007

PB - SPIE

T2 - SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation

Y2 - 17 July 2022 through 22 July 2022

ER -