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HRMOS White Paper: Science Motivation

Authors :
Magrini, Laura
Bensby, Thomas
Brucalassi, Anna
Randich, Sofia
Jeffries, Robin
de Silva, Gayandhi
Skuladottir, Asa
Smiljanic, Rodolfo
Gonzalez, Oscar
Hill, Vanessa
Lagarde, Nadege
Tolstoy, Eline
Arroyo-Polonio, Jose' Maria
Baratella, Martina
Barnes, John R.
Battaglia, Giuseppina
Baumgardt, Holger
Bellazzini, Michele
Biazzo, Katia
Bragaglia, Angela
Carter, Bradley
Casali, Giada
Cescutti, Gabriele
Danielski, Camilla
Mena, Elisa Delgado
Drazdauskas, Arnas
Gieles, Mark
Giribaldi, Riano
Hawkins, Keith
Hoeijmakers, H. Jens
Jablonka, Pascale
Kamath, Devika
Louth, Tom
Marino, Anna Fabiola
Martell, Sarah
Merle, Thibault
Montet, Benjamin
Murphy, Michael T.
Nisini, Brunella
Nordlander, Thomas
D'Orazi, Valentina
Pino, Lorenzo
Romano, Donatella
Sacco, Germano
Sandford, Nathan R.
Sollima, Antonio
Spina, Lorenzo
Tautvaivsiene, Grazina
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Tozzi, Andrea
Van der Swaelmen, Mathieu
Van Eck, Sophie
Watson, Stephen
Worley, C. Clare
Zocchi, Alice
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The High-Resolution Multi-Object Spectrograph (HRMOS) is a facility instrument that we plan to propose for the Very Large Telescope (VLT) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), following the initial presentation at the VLT 2030 workshop held at ESO in June 2019. HRMOS provides a combination of capabilities that are essential to carry out breakthrough science across a broad range of active research areas from stellar astrophysics and exoplanet studies to Galactic and Local Group archaeology. HRMOS fills a gap in capabilities amongst the landscape of future instrumentation planned for the next decade. The key characteristics of HRMOS will be high spectral resolution (R = 60000 - 80000) combined with multi-object (20-100) capabilities and long term stability that will provide excellent radial velocity precision and accuracy (10m/s). Initial designs predict that a SNR~100 will be achievable in about one hour for a star with mag(AB) = 15, while with the same exposure time a SNR~ 30 will be reached for a star with mag(AB) = 17. The combination of high resolution and multiplexing with wavelength coverage extending to relatively blue wavelengths (down to 380\,nm), makes HRMOS a spectrograph that will push the boundaries of our knowledge and that is envisioned as a workhorse instrument in the future. The science cases presented in this White Paper include topics and ideas developed by the Core Science Team with the contributions from the astronomical community, also through the wide participation in the first HRMOS Workshop (https://indico.ict.inaf.it/event/1547/) that took place in Firenze (Italy) in October 2021.<br />Comment: 88 pages, 39 figures. Comments and expressions of interest are welcome by contacting members of the Core Science Team

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2312.08270
Document Type :
Working Paper