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Sciences for The 2.5-meter Wide Field Survey Telescope (WFST)

Authors :
WFST Collaboration
Wang, Tinggui
Liu, Guilin
Cai, Zhenyi
Gen, Jinjun
Fang, Min
He, Haoning
Jiang, Ji-an
Jiang, Ning
Kong, Xu
Li, Bin
Li, Ye
Luo, Wentao
Pan, Zhizheng
Wu, Xuefeng
Yang, Ji
Yu, Jiming
Zheng, Xianzhong
Zhu, Qingfeng
Cai, Yi-Fu
Chen, YuanYuan
Chen, Zhiwei
Dai, Zigao
Fan, Lulu
Fan, Yizhong
Fang, Wenjuan
He, Zhicheng
Hu, Lei
Hu, Maokai
Jin, Zhiping
Jiang, Zhibo
Li, Guoliang
Li, Fan
Li, Xuzhi
Liang, Runduo
Lin, Zheyu
Liu, Qingzhong
Liu, Wenhao
Liu, Zhengyan
Liu, Wei
Liu, Yao
Lou, Zheng
Qu, Han
Sheng, Zhenfeng
Shi, Jianchun
Shu, Yiping
Su, Zhenbo
Sun, Tianrui
Wang, Hongchi
Wang, Huiyuan
Wang, Jian
Wang, Junxian
Wei, Daming
Wei, Junjie
Xue, Yongquan
Yan, Jingzhi
Yang, Chao
Yuan, Ye
Yuan, Yefei
Zhang, Hongxin
Zhang, Miaomiao
Zhao, Haibin
Zhao, Wen
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
arXiv, 2023.

Abstract

The Wide Field Survey Telescope (WFST) is a dedicated photometric survey facility under construction jointly by the University of Science and Technology of China and Purple Mountain Observatory. It is equipped with a primary mirror of 2.5m in diameter, an active optical system, and a mosaic CCD camera of 0.73 Gpix on the main focus plane to achieve high-quality imaging over a field of view of 6.5 square degrees. The installation of WFST in the Lenghu observing site is planned to happen in the summer of 2023, and the operation is scheduled to commence within three months afterward. WFST will scan the northern sky in four optical bands (u, g, r, and i) at cadences from hourly/daily to semi-weekly in the deep high-cadence survey (DHS) and the wide field survey (WFS) programs, respectively. WFS reaches a depth of 22.27, 23.32, 22.84, and 22.31 in AB magnitudes in a nominal 30-second exposure in the four bands during a photometric night, respectively, enabling us to search tremendous amount of transients in the low-z universe and systematically investigate the variability of Galactic and extragalactic objects. Intranight 90s exposures as deep as 23 and 24 mag in u and g bands via DHS provide a unique opportunity to facilitate explorations of energetic transients in demand for high sensitivity, including the electromagnetic counterparts of gravitational-wave events detected by the second/third-generation GW detectors, supernovae within a few hours of their explosions, tidal disruption events and luminous fast optical transients even beyond a redshift of 1. Meanwhile, the final 6-year co-added images, anticipated to reach g about 25.5 mag in WFS or even deeper by 1.5 mag in DHS, will be of significant value to general Galactic and extragalactic sciences. The highly uniform legacy surveys of WFST will also serve as an indispensable complement to those of LSST which monitors the southern sky.<br />Comment: 46 pages, submitted to SCMPA

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....35b87b6ecca538b72552488081ed9969
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2306.07590