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Probing the Invisible Universe: The Case for Far-IR/Submillimeter Interferometry

Authors :
Leisawitz, D.
Armstrong, T.
Benford, D.
Blain, A.
Danchi, K. Borne W.
Evans, N.
Gardner, J.
Gezari, D.
Harwit, M.
Kashlinsky, A.
Langer, W.
Lawrence, C.
Lawson, P.
Lester, D.
Mather, J.
Moseley, S. H.
Mundy, L.
Rieke, G.
Rinehart, S.
Shao, M.
Silverberg, R.
Spergel, D.
Staguhn, J.
Swain, M.
Traub, W.
Unwin, S.
Wright, E.
Yorke, H.
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
arXiv, 2002.

Abstract

The question "How did we get here and what will the future bring?" captures the human imagination and the attention of the National Academy of Science's Astronomy and Astrophysics Survey Commitee (AASC). Fulfillment of this "fundamental goal" requires astronomers to have sensitive, high angular and spectral resolution observations in the far-infrared/submillimeter (far-IR/sub-mm) spectral region. With half the luminosity of the universe and vital information about galaxy, star and planet formation, observations in this spectral region require capabilities similar to those currently available or planned at shorter wavelengths. In this paper we summarize the scientific motivation, some mission concepts and technology requirements for far-IR/sub-mm space interferometers that can be developed in the 2010-2020 timeframe.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, submitted as a "mission white paper" to NASA's SEU Roadmap Committee

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....164de122047d440c5a553f1064658faa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0202085