Back to Search Start Over

WST -- Widefield Spectroscopic Telescope: Motivation, science drivers and top-level requirements for a new dedicated facility

Authors :
Bacon, Roland
Maineiri, Vincenzo
Randich, Sofia
Cimatti, Andrea
Kneib, Jean-Paul
Brinchmann, Jarle
Ellis, Richard
Tolstoi, Eline
Smiljanic, Rodolfo
Hill, Vanessa
Anderson, Richard
Saez, Paula Sanchez
Opitom, Cyrielle
Bryson, Ian
Dierickx, Philippe
Garilli, Bianca
Gonzalez, Oscar
de Jong, Roelof
Lee, David
Mieske, Steffen
Otarola, Angel
Schipani, Pietro
Travouillon, Tony
Vernet, Joel
Bryant, Julia
Casali, Marc
Colless, Matthew
Couch, Warrick
Driver, Simon
Fontana, Adriano
Lehnert, Matthew
Magrini, Laura
Montet, Ben
Pasquini, Luca
Roth, Martin
Sanchez-Janssen, Ruben
Steinmetz, Matthias
Tresse, Laurence
Yeche, Christophe
Ziegler, Bodo
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In this paper, we describe the wide-field spectroscopic survey telescope (WST) project. WST is a 12-metre wide-field spectroscopic survey telescope with simultaneous operation of a large field-of-view (3 sq. degree), high-multiplex (20,000) multi-object spectrograph (MOS), with both a low and high-resolution modes, and a giant 3x3 arcmin2 integral field spectrograph (IFS). In scientific capability, these specifications place WST far ahead of existing and planned facilities. In only 5 years of operation, the MOS would target 250 million galaxies and 25 million stars at low spectral resolution, plus 2 million stars at high resolution. Without need for pre-imaged targets, the IFS would deliver 4 billion spectra offering many serendipitous discoveries. Given the current investment in deep imaging surveys and noting the diagnostic power of spectroscopy, WST will fill a crucial gap in astronomical capability and work in synergy with future ground and space-based facilities. We show how it can address outstanding scientific questions in the areas of cosmology; galaxy assembly, evolution, and enrichment, including our own Milky Way; the origin of stars and planets; and time domain and multi-messenger astrophysics. WST's uniquely rich dataset may yield unforeseen discoveries in many of these areas. The telescope and instruments are designed as an integrated system and will mostly use existing technology, with the aim to minimise the carbon footprint and environmental impact. We will propose WST as the next European Southern Observatory (ESO) project after completion of the 39-metre ELT.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.12518
Document Type :
Working Paper