Back to Search Start Over

Overview of the DESI Milky Way Survey

Authors :
Cooper, Andrew P.
Koposov, Sergey E.
Prieto, Carlos Allende
Manser, Christopher J.
Kizhuprakkat, Namitha
Myers, Adam D.
Dey, Arjun
Gaensicke, Boris T.
Li, Ting S.
Rockosi, Constance
Valluri, Monica
Najita, Joan
Deason, Alis
Raichoor, Anand
Wang, Mei-Yu
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Kim, Bokyoung
Carrillo, Andreia
Wang, Wenting
Silva, Leandro Beraldo e
Han, Jiwon Jesse
Ding, Jiani
Sanchez-Conde, Miguel
Aguilar, Jessica N.
Ahlen, Steven
Bailey, Stephen
Belokurov, Vasily
Brooks, David
Cunha, Katia
Dawson, Kyle
de la Macorra, Axel
Doel, Peter
Eisenstein, Daniel J.
Fagrelius, Parker
Fanning, Kevin
Font-Ribera, Andreu
Forero-Romero, Jaime E.
Gaztanaga, Enrique
Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A
Guy, Julien
Honscheid, Klaus
Kehoe, Robert
Kisner, Theodore
Kremin, Anthony
Landriau, Martin
Levi, Michael E.
Martini, Paul
Meisner, Aaron M.
Miquel, Ramon
Moustakas, John
Nie, Jundan
Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie
Percival, Will J.
Poppett, Claire
Prada, Francisco
Rehemtulla, Nabeel
Schlafly, Edward
Schlegel, David
Schubnell, Michael
Sharples, Ray M.
Tarle, Gregory
Wechsler, Risa H.
Weinberg, David H.
Zhou, Zhimin
Zou, Hu
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We describe the Milky Way Survey (MWS) that will be undertaken with the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) on the Mayall 4m telescope at the Kitt Peak National Observatory. Over the next 5 yr DESI MWS will observe approximately seven million stars at Galactic latitudes |b|>20 degrees, with an inclusive target selection scheme focused on the thick disk and stellar halo. MWS will also include several high-completeness samples of rare stellar types, including white dwarfs, low-mass stars within 100pc of the Sun, and horizontal branch stars. We summarize the potential of DESI to advance understanding of Galactic structure and stellar evolution. We introduce the final definitions of the main MWS target classes and estimate the number of stars in each class that will be observed. We describe our pipelines for deriving radial velocities, atmospheric parameters, and chemical abundances. We use ~500,000 spectra of unique stellar targets from the DESI Survey Validation program (SV) to demonstrate that our pipelines can measure radial velocities to ~1 km/s and [Fe/H] accurate to ~0.2 dex for typical stars in our main sample. We find the stellar parameter distributions from ~100 sq. deg of SV observations with >90% completeness on our main sample are in good agreement with expectations from mock catalogs and previous surveys.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 44 pages, 25 figures, 4 tables, one of a suite of 8 papers detailing targeting for DESI; v2 added links to data shown in figures, added citations to other DESI papers, corrected author list and minor typos; v3 fixed minor errors in Fig. 6 and clarified associated text; v4 updated to include minor changes in response to review

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2208.08514
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acb3c0