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RomAndromeda: The Roman Survey of the Andromeda Halo

Authors :
Dey, Arjun
Najita, Joan
Filion, Carrie
Han, Jiwon Jesse
Pearson, Sarah
Wyse, Rosemary
Thob, Adrien C. R.
Anguiano, Borja
Apfel, Miranda
Arnaboldi, Magda
Bell, Eric F.
Silva, Leandro Beraldo e
Besla, Gurtina
Bhattacharya, Aparajito
Bhattacharya, Souradeep
Chandra, Vedant
Choi, Yumi
Collins, Michelle L. M.
Cunningham, Emily C.
Dalcanton, Julianne J.
Escala, Ivanna
Foote, Hayden R.
Ferguson, Annette M. N.
Gibson, Benjamin J.
Gnedin, Oleg Y.
Guhathakurta, Puragra
Hawkins, Keith
Horta, Danny
Ibata, Rodrigo
Kallivayalil, Nitya
Koch, Eric W.
Koposov, Sergey
Lewis, Geraint F.
Macri, Lucas
McKinnon, Kevin A.
Nidever, David L.
Olsen, Knut A. G.
Patel, Ekta
Petersen, Michael S.
Petric, Andreea
Price-Whelan, Adrian M.
Rich, R. Michael
Riley, Alexander H.
Saha, Abhijit
Sanderson, Robyn E.
Sharma, Sanjib
Sohn, Sangmo Tony
Soraisam, Monika D.
Steinmetz, Matthias
Valluri, Monica
Vivas, A. Katherina
Williams, Benjamin F.
Wojno, J. Leigh
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

As our nearest large neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy provides a unique laboratory for investigating galaxy formation and the distribution and substructure properties of dark matter in a Milky Way-like galaxy. Here, we propose an initial 2-epoch ($\Delta t\approx 5$yr), 2-band Roman survey of the entire halo of Andromeda, covering 500 square degrees, which will detect nearly every red giant star in the halo (10$\sigma$ detection in F146, F062 of 26.5, 26.1AB mag respectively) and yield proper motions to $\sim$25 microarcsec/year (i.e., $\sim$90 km/s) for all stars brighter than F146 $\approx 23.6$ AB mag (i.e., reaching the red clump stars in the Andromeda halo). This survey will yield (through averaging) high-fidelity proper motions for all satellites and compact substructures in the Andromeda halo and will enable statistical searches for clusters in chemo-dynamical space. Adding a third epoch during the extended mission will improve these proper motions by $\sim t^{-1.5}$, to $\approx 11$ km/s, but this requires obtaining the first epoch in Year 1 of Roman operations. In combination with ongoing and imminent spectroscopic campaigns with ground-based telescopes, this Roman survey has the potential to yield full 3-d space motions of $>$100,000 stars in the Andromeda halo, including (by combining individual measurements) robust space motions of its entire globular cluster and most of its dwarf galaxy satellite populations. It will also identify high-velocity stars in Andromeda, providing unique information on the processes that create this population. These data offer a unique opportunity to study the immigration history, halo formation, and underlying dark matter scaffolding of a galaxy other than our own.<br />Comment: Submitted in response to the call for Roman Space Telescope Core Community Survey white papers

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.12302
Document Type :
Working Paper