Title: Radio, Millimeter and Submillimeter Planning Group
1Radio, Millimeter and Submillimeter Planning Group
Martha P. Haynes (Cornell University) on behalf
of the RMSPG
Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory
Committee February 15, 2005
2RMS Planning Group
Premise Recommendations as outlined in Astro
Astrophys in the New Millenium From the Sun to
the Earth And Beyond Connecting Quarks with the
Cosmos New Frontiers in the Solar
System Objective Update/Implementation
Plan Membership Same as 2000 AASC Radio/Submm
Panel
- Martha Haynes, Cornell/NAIC
- Geoff Blake, Caltech
- Don Campbell, Cornell
- John Carlstrom, Chicago
- Neal Evans, Texas
- Jackie Hewitt, MIT
- Ken Kellermann, NRAO
- Alan Marscher, BU
- Jim Moran, Harvard
- Steve Myers, NRAO
- Mark Reid, SAO
- Jack Welch, Berkeley
http//www.astro.cornell.edu/haynes/rmspg Site
includes a compilation of RMS facilities
- A community volunteer effort
- Funding to date provided by AUI
- No special interaction with AUI/NRAO director
3RMS Astronomy
Key points
- RMS science addresses a broad range of key
astrophysical questions, either uniquely (e.g.
CMB, microarcsec imaging, nanosecond pulsar
timing, radar) or in complement with other
datasets. - RMS facility portfolio (National University
facilities) provides observing capability over 5
orders of magnitude in wavelength (10 MHz to 1
THz) and angular scales down to 100
microarcseconds. - Support for the RMS community is crucial.
- Effective return on facilities investment
- Balance of large versus small science
- Hands-on training of next generation
- The US program is arguably foremost in the world
and almost exclusively in the NSF domain.
4Foremost Science Questions
- How did the Universe begin? (CMB experiments)
- What is the fate of the Universe? (SKA)
- How did the Dark Ages end? (MWA, PaST, LWA,
SKA) - When and how did the first galaxies form? (ALMA,
CSO/CCAT, EVLA, VLBA/HSA, GBT, surveys) - When and how did supermassive black holes form?
(EVLA, ALMA, SKA, VLBA/HSA) - Was Einstein right? (Arecibo, GBT, EVLA, SKA)
- How do stars and substellar objects form?
(CSO/CCAT, LMT, ALMA, CARMA, SMA, VLBA/HSA) - How do planets form? (ALMA)
- Does extraterrestrial life exist? (ATA, Arecibo)
5RMS Centimeter to Meter Wavelengths National
Center Facilities
Arecibo 0.3 - 10 GHz 3.5 at 21cm Collecting area
GBT 0.1 - 115 GHz 9 at 21 cm Unblocked aperture
EVLA 0.1 - 50 GHz 0.4 at 6cm Imaging array
VLBA 0.3 - 96 GHz .001 at 86 GHz Imaging array
- National facilities are the worlds best radio
telescopes. - There are no comparable private facilities but
partnership needed with university community for
future developments (surveys, ATA, LWA, MWA,
SKA). - National centers provide both access and
leadership.
The radio astronomy community is justifiably
proud of both its national centers, NRAO and
NAIC, ... 2000 AASC Radio Submillimeter Panel
Report
6Arecibo Revolutionized Capabilities
- Exploit the big dishs HIGH SENSITIVITY and RADAR
capability - Surveys with ALFA (galactic and extragalactic)
- Pulsar surveys and timing (tests of GR)
- Statistical characterization of continuum
transients - High Sensitivity Array for VLBI (time domain, mJy
VLBI) - Solar System radar
- SKA testbed wide bandwidth (2-11 GHz) focal
plane array - Partnerships for surveys, instrumentation,
software etc.
7GBT Revolutionized Capabilities
Exploit the GBTs unique characteristics
- Unblocked aperture (galactic HI)
- Active surface (high frequencies)
- Full steerability (70 of sky)
- Location in NRQZ (low RFI)
- Wide frequency coverage
- 3mm bolometer array
- Wideband spectrometer
- Dynamic scheduling
8EVLA Revolutionized Capabilities
- Multiply by at least 10X the capabilities of the
VLA - Increased continuum sensitivity by 2 40 X
- Complete frequency coverage from 1 50 GHz
- Noise limited imaging in all bands
- Huge increase in spectral capabilities
- Correlator contributed by Canada
- Increase spatial resolution by 10X (NM Array)
- e2e user access tools and data products
9VLBA/HSA sub-mJy at sub-mas
- The VLBA is the worlds only dedicated VLBI
array. - Full complement of instrumentation
- Time critical images of motions and source
evolution - Unparalleled astrometry (microarcsec accuracy)
- High Sensitivity Array (HSA) Arecibo/GBT/VLA
- Sub-milliarcsec resolution at sub-mJy levels
- eVLBI (near) real-time imaging
10RMS Centimeter to Meter Wavelengths
Development program for this decade
- Enhance capabilities of existing instruments,
emphasizing unique capabilities of Arecibo, EVLA,
GBT , VLBA and HSA - Develop new approaches, leading towards Next
Generation Radio Telescope SKA - EVLA-II the path to the high frequency SKA
- ATA demo of large N/small D concept
- MWA 80-300 MHz for EOR/transients
- LWA 15-80 MHz to open new window
- Develop a dedicated Solar capability FASR
- Make telecopes easier to use and produce uniform,
publicly accessible images and data products
(e2e) - Foster the training of young scientists
- Foster the preservation of the radio spectrum
- Educate the public about RMS science
11RMS Millimeter to Submillimeter Wavelengths
ALMA 84 950 GHz 0.02 at 1 mm Imaging array
CARMA 115-345 GHz 0.10 at 1 mm Imaging array
SMA 180-900 GHz 0.15 at 0.45mm Imaging array
LMT 75-345 GHz 6 at 3 mm Collecting area
CSO 180900 GHz 30 at 1 mm Surveys, spectroscopy
SPT 90-1500 GHz 1 at 2mm Surveys, SZ effect
ARO 65-490 GHz 21 at 1 mm Molecular searches
- Technological developments and new facilities at
superb sites are revolutionizing astronomy in the
millimeter to submillimeter range. - ALMA and the SMA will provide exquisite detail
over small fields. Other facilities will provide
the source surveys and spectroscopy (especially
redshifts).
12ALMA Imaging Origins
- CO or CI emission from Milky Way at z 3
- Gas kinematics in protostars and protoplanetary
disks around young Sun-like stars at 150 pc - Detection of gaps created by forming planets in
disks - Precision imaging at angular resolution of 0.1
Partners North America, Europe, Japan MREFC
funded 2002-2010 completion 2012 Partial array
science 2007-8 Location at 5000 m in Atacama
altiplano
13RMS Millimeter to Submillimeter Wavelengths
Developments for MS in the ALMA era
- Development of large bolometer arrays for wide
area mapping - Enhancement of high sensitivity, broadband
spectroscopic capabilities (z-machines) - Large aperture (25 m class) submillimeter Atacama
Telescope (CCAT) - Millimeter VLBI using ALMA, LMT, JCMT, CSO, CCAT
(Schwarschild radius scale in Sgr A, M87, Cen A) - Foster a growing MS community at all levels
- Foster the training of young scientists
- Educate the public about RMS science
In this decade, MS is maturing as a field.
14Ground-based CMB Experiments
- Direct observations of the CMB lie uniquely in
the domain of RMS astronomy. - Ground based experiments probe CMB anisotropy and
polarization on different scales and thus
complement results from space missions. - RMS surveys critical for foreground determination.
Task Force on CMB Research Ray Weiss
presentation tomorrow
15Solar Radio Astronomy
FASR Frequency Agile Solar Radio Telescope
- FASR was endorsed by the 2000 AASC as well as the
Solar and Space Physics equivalent From the Sun
to the Earth - and Beyond. - A proposal to conduct DD on FASR will be
submitted to NSF GEO/ATM. - Dedicated to solar weather, FASR will be a data
machine not a PI facility.
16Role of RMS University Community
- University groups use the RMS facilities for
their research. - Targeted experiments (CMB, SZA, EOR, surveys) are
carried out by university research groups,
leading to science results as well as the
production of public access data products. - Instrument development is carried out by
university groups for both university and
national facilities. - The ATA is the large-N/small D SKA
demonstrator. - Millimeter-wave interferometry expertise has
historically resided principally in the
universities. - The MS university facilities complement ALMA
scientifically, providing hybrid configurations,
redshift machines and wide area surveys. - University facilities train the next generation
by involving students in instrument development
and operations in ways that e.g., ALMA, as a huge
international project, cannot.
17RMS Astronomy Technology Drivers
- Huge advances in digital technology
- Real-time imaging for EVLA/VLBA
- Signal processors for pulsars, spectroscopic
surveys, solar studies, transient detection, rfi
mitigation - Electronic steering
- Huge advances in camera technology
- Bolometer arrays
- Focal plane arrays for centimeter bands
- Superb sites
- Possibilities for submillimeter/FIR from the
ground (Atacama, South Pole) - Low RFI environment for low frequencies (Mileura)
- Innovative designs for large apertures
- Low frequency arrays (LWA, MWA, PaST)
- Large N/small D (ATA, SKA)
18RMS Radio to Millimeter to Submillimeter
Wavelengths
Synergies with NASA/DOE facilities/missions
- RMS science addresses forefront questions from
unique perspective which adds to the view derived
at other wavelengths. - Ground based CMB experiments and RMS surveys to
determine foregrounds in combination with space
missions will characterize anisotropy and
polarization. - Radar studies of NEAs thermal emission from
KBOs - Deep space probe tracking (VLBA/VLA/GBT/Arecibo)
- Space weather (FASR, Arecibo)
- Technology development (wideband receivers,
bolometer arrays, cm-band focal plane arrays,
high speed data transmission, rfi mitigation,
large N/small D, etc). - Space VLBI offers the highest resolution.
19RMS Radio to Millimeter to Submillimeter
Wavelengths
RMS facilities provide a suite of instruments
with little overlap in capability constrained
budgets are a reality.
Principal Challenges in 2005
- Must maintain healthy portfolio of large
(expensive) facilities but also develop the next
generation instruments. - Must provide adequate support for fast, targeted
experiments/surveys by university research
groups. - Must nurture innovative technology development to
drive future science discoveries. - Must support community to use the facilities
efficiently and effectively, to train the next
generation, and to educate the public.
RMS is not alone in these challenges.
20Astronomical Discovery Space The
Frequency-Resolution Plane
Coverage of various future/current instruments is
shown. Upper limit set by diffraction, or
detector. Lower limits set by telescope or
antenna field of view.
10 mas
10 mas
21RMS Radio to Millimeter to Submillimeter
Wavelengths
22RMS Radio to Millimeter to Submillimeter
Wavelengths
23Radio, Millimeter and Submillimeter (RMS)
Facility Acronyms
ALMA Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array MS
Arecibo 305m telescope of NAIC R
ARO Arizona Radio Observatory MS
ATA Allen Telescope Array R
CARMA Combined Array for Millimeter Astronomy M
CCAT Cornell-Caltech Atacama Telescope S
CSO Caltech Submillimeter Astronomy S
DSNA Deep Space Network Array R
EVLA Expanded Very Large Array R
FASR Frequency Agile Solar Radiotelescope R
GBT Green Bank Telescope RM
LMT Large Millimeter Telescope M
LWA Long Wavelength Array R
MWA Mileura Widefield Array R
SKA Square Kilometer Array R
SMA Submillimeter Array S
SPT South Pole Telescope S
VLBA Very Long Baseline Array R
24More RMS Acronyms
- EVLA I
- First phase of EVLA project
- Begun 2001 Expected completion 2012
- Modernize existing facility correlator,
receivers, software - EVLA II
- 2nd phase of EVLA project
- Proposal submitted 2004 under review
- Increase angular resolution by 10X with
additional antennas spread throughout New Mexico - eVLBI (Near) real-time VLBI imaging by
transmission of data over internet to central
correlator (vs physical shipment of disks) - e2e End-to-end development of software tools
for users to aid from proposal submission to
observations to data reduction - HSA High Sensitivity Array (VLBA VLA GBT
Arecibo) - Large N/Small D Large number of small diameter
dishes - NAIC National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center
- NMA New Mexico Array
- NRAO National Radio Astronomy Observatory
- RMS Radio, Millimeter and Submillimeter