The Detailed Science Case for the Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer: The Composition and Dynamics of the Faint Universe (original) (raw)

Stellar Astrophysics and Exoplanet Science with the Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE)

arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics, 2019

The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) is a planned 11.25-m aperture facility with a 1.5 square degree field of view that will be fully dedicated to multi-object spectroscopy. A rebirth of the 3.6m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Maunakea, MSE will use 4332 fibers operating at three different resolving powers (R ~ 2500, 6000, 40000) across a wavelength range of 0.36-1.8mum, with dynamical fiber positioning that allows fibers to match the exposure times of individual objects. MSE will enable spectroscopic surveys with unprecedented scale and sensitivity by collecting millions of spectra per year down to limiting magnitudes of g ~ 20-24 mag, with a nominal velocity precision of ~100 m/s in high-resolution mode. This white paper describes science cases for stellar astrophysics and exoplanet science using MSE, including the discovery and atmospheric characterization of exoplanets and substellar objects, stellar physics with star clusters, asteroseismology of solar-like oscillators ...

Astrophysical Tests of Dark Matter with Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer

2019

Author(s): Li, Ting S; Kaplinghat, Manoj; Bechtol, Keith; Bolton, Adam S; Bovy, Jo; Carleton, Timothy; Chang, Chihway; Drlica-Wagner, Alex; Erkal, Denis; Geha, Marla; Greco, Johnny P; Grillmair, Carl J; Kim, Stacy Y; Laporte, Chervin FP; Lewis, Geraint F; Makler, Martin; Mao, Yao-Yuan; Marshall, Jennifer L; McConnachie, Alan W; Necib, Lina; Nierenberg, AM; Nord, Brian; Pace, Andrew B; Pawlowski, Marcel S; Peter, Annika HG; Sanderson, Robyn E; Thomas, Guillaume F; Tollerud, Erik; Vegetti, Simona; Walker, Matthew G | Abstract: We discuss how astrophysical observations with the Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE), a high-multiplexity (about 4300 fibers), wide field-of-view (1.5 square degree), large telescope aperture (11.25 m) facility, can probe the particle nature of dark matter. MSE will conduct a suite of surveys that will provide critical input for determinations of the mass function, phase-space distribution, and internal density profiles of dark matter halos across all mass s...

SDSS-III: Massive Spectroscopic Surveys of the Distant Universe, the Milky Way, and ExtraSolar Planetary Systems

Astronomical Journal, 2011

Building on the legacy of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-I and II), SDSS-III is a program of four spectroscopic surveys on three scientific themes: dark energy and cosmological parameters, the history and structure of the Milky Way, and the population of giant planets around other stars. In keeping with SDSS tradition, SDSS-III will provide regular public releases of all its data, beginning with SDSS DR8 (which occurred in Jan 2011). This paper presents an overview of the four SDSS-III surveys. BOSS will measure redshifts of 1.5 million massive galaxies and Lya forest spectra of 150,000 quasars, using the BAO feature of large scale structure to obtain percent-level determinations of the distance scale and Hubble expansion rate at z<0.7 and at z~2.5. SEGUE-2, which is now completed, measured medium-resolution (R=1800) optical spectra of 118,000 stars in a variety of target categories, probing chemical evolution, stellar kinematics and substructure, and the mass profile of the dark matter halo from the solar neighborhood to distances of 100 kpc. APOGEE will obtain high-resolution (R~30,000), high signal-to-noise (S/N>100 per resolution element), H-band (1.51-1.70 micron) spectra of 10^5 evolved, late-type stars, measuring separate abundances for ~15 elements per star and creating the first high-precision spectroscopic survey of all Galactic stellar populations (bulge, bar, disks, halo) with a uniform set of stellar tracers and spectral diagnostics. MARVELS will monitor radial velocities of more than 8000 FGK stars with the sensitivity and cadence (10-40 m/s, ~24 visits per star) needed to detect giant planets with periods up to two years, providing an unprecedented data set for understanding the formation and dynamical evolution of giant planet systems. (Abridged)