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The Science Case for an Extended Spitzer Mission

Authors :
Yee, Jennifer C.
Fazio, Giovanni G.
Benjamin, Robert
Kirkpatrick, J. Davy
Malkan, Matt A.
Trilling, David
Carey, Sean
Ciardi, David R.
Apai, Daniel
Ashby, M. L. N.
Ballard, Sarah
Bean, Jacob L.
Beatty, Thomas
Berta-Thompson, Zach
Capak, P.
Charbonneau, David
Chesley, Steven
Cowan, Nicolas B.
Crossfield, Ian
Cushing, Michael C.
de Wit, Julien
Deming, Drake
Dickinson, M.
Dittmann, Jason
Dragomir, Diana
Dressing, Courtney
Emery, Joshua
Faherty, Jacqueline K.
Gagne, Jonathan
Gaudi, B. Scott
Gillon, Michael
Grillmair, Carl J.
Harris, Alan
Hora, Joseph
Ingalls, James G.
Kataria, Tiffany
Kreidberg, Laura
Krick, Jessica E.
Lowrance, Patrick J.
Mahoney, William A.
Metchev, Stanimir A.
Mommert, Michael
Mueller, Michael Migo
Shvartzvald, Yossi
Smith, Howard
Stevenson, Kevin B.
Teplitz, H. I.
Willner, S. P.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Although the final observations of the Spitzer Warm Mission are currently scheduled for March 2019, it can continue operations through the end of the decade with no loss of photometric precision. As we will show, there is a strong science case for extending the current Warm Mission to December 2020. Spitzer has already made major impacts in the fields of exoplanets (including microlensing events), characterizing near Earth objects, enhancing our knowledge of nearby stars and brown dwarfs, understanding the properties and structure of our Milky Way galaxy, and deep wide-field extragalactic surveys to study galaxy birth and evolution. By extending Spitzer through 2020, it can continue to make ground-breaking discoveries in those fields, and provide crucial support to the NASA flagship missions JWST and WFIRST, as well as the upcoming TESS mission, and it will complement ground-based observations by LSST and the new large telescopes of the next decade. This scientific program addresses NASA's Science Mission Directive's objectives in astrophysics, which include discovering how the universe works, exploring how it began and evolved, and searching for life on planets around other stars.<br />Comment: 75 pages. See page 3 for Table of Contents and page 4 for Executive Summary

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1710.04194
Document Type :
Working Paper