Title: Joint Efficient Dark-energy Investigation (JEDI)
1Joint Efficient Dark-energy Investigation (JEDI)
2- beware of the dark side
- Master Yoda
3JEDI PrototypeUltra Deep Supernova Survey on a
dedicated telescope (1998)
- To determine whether SNe Ia are good cosmological
- standard candles, we need to nail the systematic
- uncertainties (luminosity evolution,
gravitational - lensing, dust). This will require at least
hundreds of - SNe Ia at zgt1. This can be easily accomplished by
doing - an ultra deep supernova survey using a dedicated
- telescope, which can be used for other things
- simultaneously (weak lensing, gamma ray burst
- afterglows, etc).
- Wang (astro-ph/9806185)
4Go Deep!(get a lot more SNe at zgt1)
- Wang Lovelave 2001, ApJ Lett 562, 115
- Optimal for measurement of dark energy density
5Apply the idea for an ultra deep SN survey to a
space platform
- Space, the final frontier
6Joint Efficient Dark-energy Investigation (JEDI)
- a candidate implementation of the NASA-DOE
Joint Dark Energy Mission (JDEM)
7JEDI Collaboration
- PI Yun Wang (U. of Oklahoma)
- Deputy PI Edward Cheng (Conceptual Analytics)
- Lead Scientists
- Interdisciplinary Arlin Crotts (Columbia), Tom
Roellig (NASA Ames), - Ned Wright (UCLA)
- SN Peter Garnavich (Notre Dame), Mark Phillips
(Carnegie Observatory) - WL Ian DellAntonio (Brown) BAO Leonidas
Moustakas (JPL/Caltech) - Eddie Baron (U. of Oklahoma) Steve Bender
(LANL) - David Branch (U. of Oklahoma) Stefano Casertano
(Space Telescope Insti.) - Bill Forrest (U. of Rochester) Salman Habib
(LANL) - Tom Hale (LANL) Mario Hamuy (U. of Chile)
- Katrin Heitmann (LANL) Alexander Kutyrev (NASA
GSFC) - John MacKenty (Space Telescope Insti.) Craig
McMurtry (U. of Rochester) - Judy Pipher (U. of Rochester) William
Priedhorsky (LANL) - Robert Silverberg (NASA GSFC) Volker Springel
(Max Planck Insti.) - Gordon Squires (JPL/Caltech) Jason Surace
(JPL/Caltech) - Max Tegmark (MIT) Craig Wheeler (UT Austin)
8JEDI Support
NASA JPL Program Management Lockheed Martin
Mission and Spacecraft ITT/Rochester Telescope
and Instrument Rockwell Scientific Focal Plane
Assemblies
9JEDI will answer these questions
- Is dark energy a cosmological constant?
- Does Einsteins general relativity describe our
Universe?
10Whats special about JEDI
- Super Efficiency Takes gt5000 spectra (including
all the supernovae in the field of view)
simultaneously super efficiency for SNe, and
ideal for spectroscopic galaxy surveys (measuring
radial baryon acoustic oscillations and
calibrating photo zs for weak lensing) - Focus on What Cant be Done From the Ground
Covers the wavelength range (near to mid IR) not
easily accessible from the ground, and better for
the control of systematics - Multiple Methods for Accurate and Precise
Constraints on Dark Energy SNe, WL, BAO, etc
11Microshutter Arrays
- AAS 205, 5.07 Microshutter Arrays for JWST
NIRSpec., S. H. Moseley et al. - Each shutter consists
- of a shutter blade
- suspended on a
- torsion beam (from
- a support grid) that
- allows for a rotation
- of 90. A motor opens
- the shutters with a
- specially formed
- magnet as a remote
- controlling tool.
- 2D programmable
- slit mask
12 JEDI exploiting 0.8-4 µm sweet spot
- lowest sky background region within 0.3-100 µm
wavelengths - rest wavelengths in red/near-IR for
redshifts 0 lt z lt 4
Background sky spectrum Leinert 1998, AAS, 127,
1
13JEDI Necessity of Space Observations
- Supernovae as standard candles
- 1) Observation of z gt 1 SNe Ia (tightens
constraints on time variation of DE). - 2) Rest J lightcurves for all SNe Ia (better
standard candles Krisciunas et al. 2004). - 3) Multiple spectra per SN Ia (provide
constraints on systematics). - Baryon acoustic oscillations as a standard ruler
- 1) Efficiently harvest millions of galaxy
redshifts in the contiguous range 0.5ltzlt2. - 2) H(z) measured as a continuous free function.
- Weak lensing cosmography
- 1) Stable and smaller point spread function.
- 2) Higher galaxy density and higher mean galaxy
redshift from deep NIR imaging. - 3) Spectroscopic reshift information for
tomography. - Continuous H(z) to better than 2 in ?z0.2 bins
for 0 ? z ? 2.
14JEDI the Power of Three Independent Methods
- Supernovae as standard candles
- luminosity distances dL(zi)
- Baryon acoustic oscillations as a
- standard ruler
- cosmic expansion rate H(zi)
- angular diameter distance dA(zi)
- cosmic LSS growth rate G(z)
- Weak lensing cosmography
- ratios of dA(zi)/dA(zj)
- cosmic LSS growth rate G(z)
- The three independent methods will provide a
powerful cross check, - and allow JEDI to place precise constraints on
dark energy.
15Measurement of the Cosmic Expansion History
Current
JEDI
Wang Tegmark (2005) Wang Mukherjee (2006)
Wang (2006)
The JEDI mission will measure H(z) for 0 lt z lt 2
using both SNe and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations
(BAO), thus enabling model-independent
constraints on the time dependence of dark energy
16JEDI Data
- Supernovae 4000-14,000 type Ia supernovae with
well-sampled light curves and good quality
spectra. - Baryon Acoustic oscillations data 10-100
million galaxy spectra (H? emission line
galaxies) over 1000-10,000 square degrees, with
0.5 z 2. - Weak lensing data accurate measurements of
galaxy shapes over 1000-10,000 square degrees
to H ? 23 (median redshift 1 to 1.5). - Shear selected galaxy clusters over 10,000 sq
degrees - Other (what data would you like to have?)
17- JEDI science requirements map
- directly into instrument design
- parameters
- JEDI builds upon heritage
- from Spitzer and technology
- from JWST.
18Key Scientific Requirements Flowdown
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20- JEDIs preliminary optical design provides a
proof-of-concept point design combiningimaging
and spectroscopic performance in a compact,
packagable design. Further simplifications may be
the results of design studies performed during
the concept study.
21- The JEDI spacecraft easily fits within the
payload envelope of the Delta IV 4 meter
configuration shown.
22- JEDI will use the JWST/NIRSpec microshutter
array without modification.
23- The HAWAII-2RG multiplexer, used in both
focal planes, has extensive ground based
heritage.
24- The unique sky coverage of the JEDI focal
planes allows identification of spectrographic
targets by the imager due to the offset of the
imaging and spectral focal planes.
25JEDI Deep Campaign
- The spacecraft repeats a pattern that allows
spectral targets to be identified by imaging and
selected by the microshutters on the following
scan line.
26JEDI Wide Campaign
- JEDI scans successive quadrants while
obeying sun and pointing constraints. Imaging
provides spectroscopy targets as in the Deep
Campaign.
27Functional Concept
- a) the flight segment mounted in the fairing of a
Delta-IV 4-m configuration. - b) FOVs of the imaging and spectroscopic
channels projected onto the sky. - c) a preliminary optical point design
demonstrates that the desired functions are
packageable. - d) an exploded view of the JWST/NIRSpec
microshutter array. This exact hardware is
baselined for JEDI. Practical packaging
constraints for this hardware cause the small
horizontal gap between the two spectroscopic
fields-of-view in panel (b). - e) a mechanical mockup of a 5x7 focal plane array
built by RSC to demonstrate fabrication and
alignment processes. - f) a single hybrid detector basedon HAWAII-2RG
design, being produced for 3 JWST instruments.
28Competing Mission Concepts for JDEMSNAP,
JEDI, DESTINYADEPT, DUNE (?), X, Y
- Competition helps ensure that the best science
gets done
29JDEM Timeline
- July 2006 proposals selected for NASA JDEM
concept study (up to 2M a year for two years) - 2008 NASA/DOE Announcement of Opportunity (AO)
for JDEM - 2017 JDEM launch
30Conclusion
- A successful JDEM can place robust and precise
constraints on the time dependence of ?X(z) and
G(z). This will have a fundamental impact on
particle physics and cosmology. - JEDI is a powerful mission concept for JDEM.
- JEDI has unprecedented capability for ancillary
science.
31The End