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SDSS-V: Pioneering Panoptic Spectroscopy

Authors :
Kollmeier, Juna A.
Zasowski, Gail
Rix, Hans-Walter
Johns, Matt
Anderson, Scott F.
Drory, Niv
Johnson, Jennifer A.
Pogge, Richard W.
Bird, Jonathan C.
Blanc, Guillermo A.
Brownstein, Joel R.
Crane, Jeffrey D.
De Lee, Nathan M.
Klaene, Mark A.
Kreckel, Kathryn
MacDonald, Nick
Merloni, Andrea
Ness, Melissa K.
O'Brien, Thomas
Sanchez-Gallego, Jose R.
Sayres, Conor C.
Shen, Yue
Thakar, Ani R.
Tkachenko, Andrew
Aerts, Conny
Blanton, Michael R.
Eisenstein, Daniel J.
Holtzman, Jon A.
Maoz, Dan
Nandra, Kirpal
Rockosi, Constance
Weinberg, David H.
Bovy, Jo
Casey, Andrew R.
Chaname, Julio
Clerc, Nicolas
Conroy, Charlie
Eracleous, Michael
Gänsicke, Boris T.
Hekker, Saskia
Horne, Keith
Kauffmann, Jens
McQuinn, Kristen B. W.
Pellegrini, Eric W.
Schinnerer, Eva
Schlafly, Edward F.
Schwope, Axel D.
Seibert, Mark
Teske, Johanna K.
van Saders, Jennifer L.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

SDSS-V will be an all-sky, multi-epoch spectroscopic survey of over six million objects. It is designed to decode the history of the Milky Way, trace the emergence of the chemical elements, reveal the inner workings of stars, and investigate the origin of planets. It will also create an integral-field spectroscopic map of the gas in the Galaxy and the Local Group that is 1,000x larger than the current state of the art and at high enough spatial resolution to reveal the self-regulation mechanisms of galactic ecosystems. SDSS-V will pioneer systematic, spectroscopic monitoring across the whole sky, revealing changes on timescales from 20 minutes to 20 years. The survey will thus track the flickers, flares, and radical transformations of the most luminous persistent objects in the universe: massive black holes growing at the centers of galaxies. The scope and flexibility of SDSS-V will be unique among extant and future spectroscopic surveys: it is all-sky, with matched survey infrastructures in both hemispheres; it provides near-IR and optical multi-object fiber spectroscopy that is rapidly reconfigurable to serve high target densities, targets of opportunity, and time-domain monitoring; and it provides optical, ultra-wide-field integral field spectroscopy. SDSS-V, with its programs anticipated to start in 2020, will be well-timed to multiply the scientific output from major space missions (e.g., TESS, Gaia, eROSITA) and ground-based projects. SDSS-V builds on the 25-year heritage of SDSS's advances in data analysis, collaboration infrastructure, and product deliverables. The project is now refining its science scope, optimizing the survey strategies, and developing new hardware that builds on the SDSS-IV infrastructure. We present here an overview of the current state of these developments as we seek to build our worldwide consortium of institutional and individual members.<br />Comment: 23-page summary of the current status of SDSS-V. See also http://www.sdss.org/future/. SDSS-V is currently seeking institutional and individual members -- join us!

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1711.03234
Document Type :
Working Paper