PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements1 PACS Science and Performance Requirements A. Poglitsch.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
E-ELT VLT HARMONI – the first light integral field spectrograph for the E-ELT Niranjan Thatte On behalf of the HARMONI consortium Florence - 29 June 2013.
Advertisements

PACS SVR 38/9 Nov 2007 Wavelength Calibration1 FM ILT Spectrometer Wavelength Calibration Status Report H. Feuchtgruber, R. Vavrek.
Extragalactic AO Science James Larkin AOWG Strategic Planning Meeting September 19, 2004.
Optimal Photometry of Faint Galaxies Kenneth M. Lanzetta Stony Brook University.
Extragalactic science with the Herschel Space Observatory Marc Sauvage CEA/DSM/DAPNIA Service d'Astrophysique UMR AIM.
1 Debris Disk Studies with CCAT D. Dowell, J. Carpenter, H. Yorke 2005 October 11.
PACS IIDR 01/02 Mar 2001 Instrument Overview1 PACS Instrument Design Description and System Performance A. Poglitsch.
Photometric follow-up of transiting planet candidates Marton Hidas UNSW.
ELT Stellar Populations Science Near IR photometry and spectroscopy of resolved stars in nearby galaxies provides a way to extract their entire star formation.
Science Team Management Claire Max Sept 14, 2006 NGAO Team Meeting.
TIGER The TIGER Instrument Overview Phil Hinz - PI July 13, 2010.
NGAO Science Instruments Build to Cost Status February 5, 2009 Sean Adkins.
P olarized R adiation I maging and S pectroscopy M ission Probing cosmic structures and radiation with the ultimate polarimetric spectro-imaging of the.
- page 1 July NHSC Mini-workshop PACS NASA Herschel Science Center PACS Photometer AORs How to Prepare an Observation with HSpot: 2 Science Use.
CEA / PACS SVR phase 2 Photometer results from the first part of the FM ILT CEA - MPE - NHSC.
Solar observation modes: Commissioning and operational C. Vocks and G. Mann 1. Spectrometer and imaging modes 2. Commissioning proposals 3. Operational.
STATUS REPORT OF FPC SPICA Task Force Meeting March 29, 2010 MATSUMOTO, Toshio (SNU)
ATLASGAL ATLASGAL APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy F. Schuller, K. Menten, P. Schilke, et al. Max Planck Institut für Radioastronomie.
Molecular Gas and Dust in SMGs in COSMOS Left panel is the COSMOS field with overlays of single-dish mm surveys. Right panel is a 0.3 sq degree map at.
Scientific objectives for XEUS: Galaxies Groups and Clusters at z~2 Study of the Evolution of clusters in the mass range kT > 2 keV up to z=2. Dynamics,
15 October Observational Astronomy Direct imaging Photometry Kitchin pp ,
PACS Page 1 NHSC Data Processing Workshop – Pasadena Sept 10-14, 2012 SPIRE Spectrometer Data Reduction: Mapping Observations Nanyao Lu NHSC/IPAC (On behalf.
PACS FM-ILT SPECTROMETER SPATIAL CALIBRATION A. Contursi (H. Feuchtgruber) PACS Science Verification Review – 8/9 November 2007 MPE-Garching.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
Mid-InfRAred Camera wo LEns (MIRACLE) for SPICA Takehiko Wada and team MIRACLE.
Searching for Brown Dwarf Companions to Nearby Stars Michael W. McElwain, James E. Larkin & Adam J. Burgasser (UC Los Angeles) Background on Brown Dwarfs.
PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 PACS FPU Subunits1 FM FPU Subunits A. Poglitsch.
ASTRO-F Survey as an Input Catalogue for FIRST Takao Nakagawa (ISAS, Japan) & ASTRO-F Team.
PACS Hitchhiker’s Guide to Herschel Archive Workshop – Pasadena 6 th - 10 th Oct 2014 The SPIRE Photometer and its Observing Modes Bernhard Schulz (NHSC/IPAC)
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array Expanded Very Large Array Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope Very Long Baseline Array Extragalactic Source.
MIRI Optical System CDR, 6 th & 7 th December 2006 Mid InfraRed Instrument 07-1 Optical System Critical Design Review (CDR) TIPS Presentation: Margaret.
PACS Spectrometer Spatial Calibration plan in PV phase A.Contursi D. Lutz and U. Klaas.
PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Instrument Performance Prediction1 PACS Instrument Model and Performance Prediction A. Poglitsch.
KMOS Instrument Overview & Data Processing Richard Davies Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics  What does KMOS do?  When will it do it?
The JCMT in the ALMA Era Surveying the Sub-millimetre Sky (Canada / Netherlands / Great Britain) Doug Johnstone NRC/HIA.
Counting individual galaxies from deep mid-IR Spitzer surveys Giulia Rodighiero University of Padova Carlo Lari IRA Bologna Francesca Pozzi University.
64 th Symposium June, 2009 John Pearson NASA Herschel Deputy Project Scientist Jet Propulsion Laboratory THE HERSCHEL SPACE OBSERVATORY, OPENING.
Optimisation of the PACS Chopper Markus Nielbock Ulrich Klaas Jeroen Bouwman Helmut Dannerbauer Jürgen Schreiber Ulrich Grözinger.
Initial Results from the Chandra Shallow X-ray Survey in the NDWFS in Boötes S. Murray, C. Jones, W. Forman, A. Kenter, A. Vikhlinin, P. Green, D. Fabricant,
Spectroscopy with PACS M82 PACS line imaging from the SHINING team (Contursi et al First Results workshop talk) Phil Appleton and Dario Fadda for.
PACS page 1 NHSC Open Time Cycle 1 Observation Planning Workshop 3 rd - 4 th Jun 2010 – Bernhard Schulz SPIRE Overview Bernhard Schulz, Nanyao Lu, Kevin.
Observing Strategies at cm wavelengths Making good decisions Jessica Chapman Synthesis Workshop May 2003.
Elizabeth Stanway - Obergurgl, December 2009 Lyman Break Galaxies as Markers for Large Scale Structure at z=5 Elizabeth Stanway University of Bristol With.
PVPhotFlux PACS Photometer photometric calibration MPIA PACS Commissioning and PV Phase Plan Review 21 st – 22 nd January 2009, MPE Garching Markus Nielbock.
Jan 21/22, 2009PACS PV Review Photometer Spatial Cal1 PACS Photometer Spatial Calibration PVPhotSpatial D.Lutz PACS PV Review Jan 21/ , MPE.
ALMA Science Examples Min S. Yun (UMass/ANASAC). ALMA Science Requirements  High Fidelity Imaging  Precise Imaging at 0.1” Resolution  Routine Sub-mJy.
PACS ICC Readiness Review MPE, July 3/ PACS Photometer PV Phase Plan 1 Status Report M. Nielbock: PACS PHOT PV Phase Plan Markus Nielbock (MPIA)
Emission Line Galaxy Targeting for BigBOSS Nick Mostek Lawrence Berkeley National Lab BigBOSS Science Meeting Novemenber 19, 2009.
Overview, Spectrometer Products and Processing Philosophy Phil Appleton on Behalf of PACS Team PACS IFU Spectrometer.
PACS NHSC Data Processing Workshop Aug 26-30, 2013 Page 1 SPIRE Spectrometer Data: Calibration Updates, User Data Reprocessing, and Other Issues Nanyao.
PACS Page 1 NHSC Data Processing Workshop – Pasadena Aug 26-30, 2013 SPIRE Spectrometer Data Reduction: Mapping Observations Nanyao Lu NHSC/IPAC (On behalf.
PACS ICC Meeting #291/2 Oct 2007 Wavelength Calibration1 FM ILT Spectrometer Wavelength Calibration Status Report H. Feuchtgruber.
Observations of Near Infrared Extragalactic Background (NIREBL) ISAS/JAXAT. Matsumoto Dec.2-5, 2003 Japan/Italy seminar at Niigata Univ.
FIRST LIGHT A selection of future facilities relevant to the formation and evolution of galaxies Wavelength Sensitivity Spatial resolution.
Competitive Science with the WHT for Nearby Unresolved Galaxies Reynier Peletier Kapteyn Astronomical Institute Groningen.
- page 1 July NHSC Mini-workshop PACS NASA Herschel Science Center PACS Spectrometer AORs Phil Appleton 1Roberta Paladini.
Sample expanded template for one theme: Physics of Galaxy Evolution Mark Dickinson.
July 25th, 2000WFC3 Critical Science Review1 Performance Summary in Key Science Areas Verify that WFC3 as designed is capable of carrying out the WFC3.
- page 1 PACS Phil Appleton on behalf of the NHSC/HSC and the PACS ICC ; especially Bart Vandenbussche and Pierre Royer (KUL Belgium) Instrument Performance.
High Redshift Galaxies/Galaxy Surveys ALMA Community Day April 18, 2011 Neal A. Miller University of Maryland.
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) is a NASA infrared- wavelength astronomical space telescope launched on December 14, 2009 It’s an Earth-orbiting.
Color Magnitude Diagram VG. So we want a color magnitude diagram for AGN so that by looking at the color of an AGN we can get its luminosity –But AGN.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
SOFIA — The Observatory
PACS Calibration Status Report
Single Object & Time Series Spectroscopy with JWST NIRCam
The Optical Sky Background
ESAC 2017 JWST Workshop JWST User Documentation Hands on experience
Observational Prospect of NIREBL
Observational Astronomy
Presentation transcript:

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements1 PACS Science and Performance Requirements A. Poglitsch

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements2 Herschel/PACS Science Drivers Detailed in PACS Science Requirements Document: Investigations of the distant universe, studying the history of star formation and activity in galaxies through extensive surveys and dedicated follow-up observations Studies of the origins of stars through photometric and spectroscopic surveys of star forming regions and pre-stellar condensations Physics and chemistry of the interstellar medium (Galactic/extragalactic) Solar system studies

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements3 Extragalactic Photometric Surveys (I) Survey a ‘large’ region at a wavelength near 170µm to the confusion limit (“resolving the FIR background”). The Herschel confusion limit (“5  ”) at this wavelength is predicted to be below or near 10mJy by different models Simultaneously survey at a shorter wavelength to provide SED information, with the goal of covering the same area to the same depth as at 170 µm, and to reach the confusion limit at shorter wavelengths over smaller areas, if feasible Provide large sample sizes (at least thousands of objects) required in order to detect rare objects and provide sufficient statistics even after binning objects into redshift, color etc. groups

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements4 Extragalactic Photometric Surveys (II) Map contiguous regions without gaps or significant depth variations Provide the best possible positional accuracy. The identification of faint far-infrared galaxies is nontrivial and positional errors of several arcsec can already be detrimental. For good detections, the PACS internal positional error should be less than 1 arcsec, in order to be an insignificant contribution to the the total Herschel/PACS pointing accuracy Allow execution of programme within expected time allocation of order 10 3 h (  FOV / sensitivity)

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements5 Individual Galaxies (I) Provide simultaneous dual-band photometry at 170µm and one shorter wavelength, and the possibility to obtain photometry in total for three different bands in the 60 to 200µm range. A smaller shortest wavelength would be desirable (but not required) for SED characterization and AGN/starburst discrimination Obtain continuous maps over larger regions Provide spectroscopy of individual lines anywhere in the 60 to 210µm range, covering instantaneously a range of km/s with a resolution element of km/s. The detection limit should reach ~ W/m 2 in practical times to achieve the scientific goals

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements6 Individual Galaxies (II) Provide the possibility to obtain complete µm spectra at this resolution for brighter sources Obtain spectral line maps. Spatial multiplexing increases mapping speed and ensures correct spectroscopy even for slightly mistargeted sources, as might occur due to inaccurate (far-infrared!) positions or Herschel pointing errors. These advantages are considered more important than those of increased spectral multiplexing (i.e. increased instantaneous wavelength range).  FOV / sensitivity

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements7 Star Formation and the Galactic ISM (I) Survey at 170µm large areas (up to square degrees, either contiguous or in patches preselected from other observations) to a depth somewhat shallower than for the extragalactic surveys (5 , 10 mJy to a few tens of mJy) Simultaneously cover a shorter wavelength, with the goal of reaching the same depth over the same area. In a situation limited by cirrus confusion, deeper integrations may in fact be chosen to take advantage of the lower confusion limit in the shorter band.

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements8 Star Formation and the Galactic ISM (II) Preserve the image quality of the Hesrchel telescope. –Especially for crowded cluster cores, the intended lowering of the Hesrchel telescope diffraction limited wavelength to the goal of 85µm or below will directly boost the quality of the data at these wavelengths –Limiting the strength of PSF wings and sidelobes due to optical effects or cross-talk is important because of the presence of strong contrasts Provide SED photometry for three points spread across the µm range. For study of the warmest sources, it is desirable (but not required) to include a photometric point below 60µm to get below the peak of the SED

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements9 Star Formation and the Galactic ISM (III) Cover a wavelength range of at least µm in spectroscopy mode, allowing both single line and range spectroscopy. Provide spectroscopy for a FOV of several beams instantaneously for observations of complex targets and efficient mapping Spectroscopically observe bright sources  FOV / sensitivity / dynamic range

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements10 Stars Spectroscopically observe bright sources (maximum about 10000Jy at 60µm). Note: In case this goal induces design conflicts with faint source observations, faint sources must have absolute priority For studies of features in bright sources rapidly cover (spectrophotometrically) the full µm wavelength range, at the expense of high resolution fidelity

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements11 Solar System Objects Obtain all types of observations (photometry, line spectroscopy, range spectroscopy, chopping/ nodding) also on (moving) solar system targets. This is primarily a requirement on the Herschel pointing system, but also on PACS observing modes Observe bright sources. Goals are that PACS should be able to obtain observations of Uranus in imaging mode for calibration. All outer planets should be observable in spectroscopy mode (extended sources, brightness temperature ~140K for Jupiter/ Saturn, Mars is even warmer but smaller). Note: In case this goal induces design conflicts with faint source observations, faint sources must have absolute priority

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements12 Required Photometer Capabilities Instantaneous FOV: 3.5’ x 1.75’, Nyquist sampled 3 wavelength bands: 60 – 85 µm, 85 – 130 µm, 130 – 210 µm Dual-band photometry observing modes –Targeted point source photometry (on-array chopping/ nodding) –Targeted compact object mapping mode (off-array chopping / nodding) –Extended object / survey mapping mode (scanning; if necessary/applicable with chopping) Chopper throw commandable 0…±4 arcmin

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements13 Photometer Performance Requirements Image quality –blur: telescope limited (instrument-internal Strehl >90%) –distortion: ±1 pixel; alignment: <1/3 pixel Sensitivity (point source detection) –requirement: 5 mJy (5  ), 1h of integration –goal: 3 mJy (5  ), 1h of integration Dynamic range –detection from 3 mJy to >1000 Jy (goal: 3000 Jy) –contrast of up to 1:500 in one field Post-detection bandwidth –requirement: Hz –goal: Hz

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements14 Required Spectrometer Capabilities Wavelength range: 205µm Resolution: 150…300 km/s Instantaneous velocity coverage: 1000…2000 km/s Instantaneous FOV: ~ 1’ x 1’ Spectroscopic observing modes –Targeted compact source spectroscopy (chopping/nodding; individual lines or wavelength ranges / SED) –Spectral line mapping of extended sources (chopping/nodding, wavelength switching) –Full spectral and spatial sampling must be possible

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements15 Spectrometer Performance Requirements Image quality –blur: telescope limited (instrument-internal Strehl >90%) –distortion: ±1 pixel; alignment: <1/4 pixel Sensitivity (point source detection) –requirement: 3x W/m 2 (5  ), 1h of integration –goal: 2x W/m 2 (5  ), 1h of integration Dynamic range –detection from ~1x W/m 2 to > W/m 2 –contrast of up to 1:100 in one field –spectral ghosts <1% Post-detection bandwidth –requirement: 5 Hz –goal: 10 Hz

PACS SVR 22/23 June 2006 Scientific/Performance Requirements16 Verification of Required Performance Many of the instrument requirements are achieved by design (and have been subject of previous reviews) Performance-relevant quantities that need verification by testing (on ground and/or in orbit) include –Sensitivity (including radiation effects) –Optical performance (PSF, spectral resolution, distortion, position accuracy) –Calibration accuracy (photometric, wavelength) –Suppression of “systematics” [fringing, inhomogeneity in filters, “structure” in optics (including telescope), …] at the …<10 -5 level of the background Verification of AOT design/optimisation regarding –Scientific needs –Instrument limitations