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leveraging LSST. Tony Tyson Director, LSST Project University of California, Davis. DSS: digitized photographic plates. 7.5 arcminutes. Sloan Digital Sky Survey. LSST -- almost. 2800 galaxies i <25 mag. × 200 for one DESpec FOV. LSST Observing Cadence.
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leveraging LSST Tony Tyson Director, LSST Project University of California, Davis
DSS: digitized photographic plates 7.5 arcminutes
LSST -- almost 2800 galaxies i<25 mag ×200 for one DESpec FOV
LSST Observing Cadence • Pairs of 15 second exposures (to 24.5 mag) per visit to a given position in the sky. • Visit this position again within the hour with another pair of exposures. • Number of 9.6 sq.deg FOV visits per night: 900 • Deep-Drilling: 1 hour per night on a selected field. Continuous 15 sec exposures Detection of transients announced within 60 seconds. Expect ~1 million per night
Two planned LSST surveys MAIN SURVEY Deep Wide Survey: 20,000 square degrees to a uniform depth of u: 26.7 g: 27.4 r: 27.7 i: 26.9 z: 26.1 y: 24.9 DEEP DRILLING 10% of time: ~30 selected fields. 300 square degrees Continuous 15 sec exposures. 1hour/night
LSST Wide-Fast-Deep survey • 4 billion galaxies with photometric redshifts • 20 trillion photometric measurements of 20 billion objects • 70PB database • Immediate transient alerts
LSST Science Book v2.0 written by LSST Collaboration • 245 authors • 598 pages • Living document (on lsst.org) http://www.lsst.org/lsst/scibook
LSST Science Charts New Territory Probing Dark Matter And Dark Energy Mapping the Milky Way opens the time window! Finding Near Earth Asteroids
Three classes of useful LSST spectroscopy Calibration samples for quantities that can be derived from photometric data: photometric redshifts for galaxies, photometric metallicity for stars Supplemental data that cannot be obtained from LSST data: radial velocity, emission and absorption line strengths Identification spectra for transient, weird and unusual objects (SNe, GRB followup, high-z quasars, brown dwarfs) These differ by the needed sample size, sample depth, required spectral resolution, and the time delay relative to imaging data.
The vast majority of LSST science uses LSST multi-band time domain photometry data alone • Some exceptions: • 1. Photo-z needs spec for r<24 mag over 10 sq.deg -> 10meter • 2. TRANSIENTS • Rare bright needs 2-4meter • Faint (22-24mag) needs 10-30meter • 3. Strong lensing: magnified source spectroscopy • 4. SNe z<1.2 needs 10meter • 5. Stellar mostly hi-res
190 sq deg DESpec on Blanco* to 24.5
Alert Rate In ten minutes time the LSST transient pipeline is likely to issue ~10,000 alerts at 5σ. While most of these will be moving objects, perhaps several thousand will be flaring objects or bursts. Possibly new kinds of objects! Clearly any feasible spectroscopic followup at 23 mag will lag behind ~1 hour per hour. What is needed then is highly trusted event classification. FAST
DESpec coverage of LSST surveys • ¼ of main 20,000 sq.deg to 22.5 mag at S/N=5 0.7% of gold sample of i<25 mag galaxies useful for correlation calibration of photo-z • deep spectroscopy of deep drilling fields 20 fields, 20 hours each, 50 nights ~24 mag @ S/N=10 per 10Å bin transient host spectra • co-observing spectroscopy of deep drilling fields 1 hour / night ~22 mag @ S/N=5 per 1Å bin transient spectra
CLASSIFICATION DATA PRODUCTS
Science at the Limit • Much of the breakthrough science using surveys (imaging or spectroscopy) occurs at the limits of the surveys • Noise, Sample incompleteness • Subtle systematic errors Statistical studies must be corrected for these errors
large spectroscopic samples are useful Example: even an incomplete spectroscopic sample can help photo-z in two ways • angular cross correlation with faint photometric sample will calibrate photo-z statistically (Newman) • large spectroscopic samples can improve knowledge of evolution of galaxy SEDs.
There are currently 20 telescopes larger than 3m with spectrographs that can reach the LSST survey area. Even in the ELT era, wide field multi-object spectroscopy on 4-10m class telescopes will be useful Statistics matters. Calibration of the 70PB LSST database, and massively parallel follow-up of a million transients will be complementary to selected faint object spectroscopy
LSST science deliverables do not require followup spectroscopy But we can and should pursue a range of followup programs, from co-observing highly parallel spectroscopy, to individual object followup.
Assuring accurate classification Characterize the known clustering) Assign the new (classification) Discover the unknown (outlier detection) Tom Vestrand • Benefits of very large data sets: • best statistical analysis of “typical” events • automated search for “rare” events
The dimension reduction problem: Finding correlations and “fundamental planes” of parameters • The Curse of High Dimensionality ! • Are there combinations (linear or non-linear functions) of observational parameters that correlate strongly with one another? • Are there basis sets that represent the full set of properties?