阿塔卡马大口径亚毫米望远镜(AtLAST)科学:探测瞬变和时变天空。

Open research Europe Pub Date : 2025-01-14 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/openreseurope.17686.2
John Orlowski-Scherer, Thomas Maccarone, Joe Bright, Tomasz Kamiński, Michael Koss, Atul Mohan, Francisco Miguel Montenegro-Montes, Sigurd Næss, Claudio Ricci, Paola Severgnini, Thomas Stanke, Cristian Vignali, Sven Wedemeyer, Mark Booth, Claudia Cicone, Luca Di Mascolo, Doug Johnstone, Tony Mroczkowski, Martin Cordiner, Jochen Greiner, Evanthia Hatziminaoglou, Eelco van Kampen, Pamela Klaassen, Minju Lee, Daizhong Liu, Amélie Saintonge, Matthew Smith, Alexander Thelen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对瞬态和可变事件的研究,包括新星、活动星系核和黑洞双星,在历史上一直是阐明我们宇宙进化机制的富有成效的途径。然而,在毫米和亚毫米范围内对此类事件的研究仍处于起步阶段。亚毫米观测探测了各种各样的物质,比如光学厚度较大的尘埃,这些物质很难在其他波长下研究。亚毫米观测对许多发射机制都很敏感,从前面提到的冷尘埃,到热的自由-自由发射,以及高能粒子的同步辐射。由于缺乏及时、高灵敏度的亚毫米跟踪,以及缺乏高天空覆盖率的亚毫米巡天,对这些现象的研究受到了阻碍。在本文中,我们描述了拟议的阿塔卡马大口径亚毫米望远镜(AtLAST)如何填补我们对瞬态宇宙的理解中的这些空白。我们讨论了一些将从AtLAST观测中受益的科学案例,并详细说明了AtLAST如何独特地适合为它们做出贡献。特别是,AtLAST的大视场将使瞬时事件的偶然检测成为可能,而其预期的快速找到源并在多个波段同时观察的能力也使其非常适合瞬态跟踪。我们对这些科学案例做出了重要贡献所需的仪器和天文台特性的理论预测,并将其与预测的AtLAST能力进行了比较。最后,我们考虑了瞬态科学案例约束AtLAST观测策略的独特方式,并制定了AtLAST如何观测以最大化其瞬态科学输出而不影响其他科学案例的处方。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) science: Probing the transient and time-variable sky.

The study of transient and variable events, including novae, active galactic nuclei, and black hole binaries, has historically been a fruitful path for elucidating the evolutionary mechanisms of our universe. The study of such events in the millimeter and submillimeter is, however, still in its infancy. Submillimeter observations probe a variety of materials, such as optically thick dust, which are hard to study in other wavelengths. Submillimeter observations are sensitive to a number of emission mechanisms, from the aforementioned cold dust, to hot free-free emission, and synchrotron emission from energetic particles. Study of these phenomena has been hampered by a lack of prompt, high sensitivity submillimeter follow-up, as well as by a lack of high-sky-coverage submillimeter surveys. In this paper, we describe how the proposed Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) could fill in these gaps in our understanding of the transient universe. We discuss a number of science cases that would benefit from AtLAST observations, and detail how AtLAST is uniquely suited to contributing to them. In particular, AtLAST's large field of view will enable serendipitous detections of transient events, while its anticipated ability to get on source quickly and observe simultaneously in multiple bands make it also ideally suited for transient follow-up. We make theoretical predictions for the instrumental and observatory properties required to significantly contribute to these science cases, and compare them to the projected AtLAST capabilities. Finally, we consider the unique ways in which transient science cases constrain the observational strategies of AtLAST, and make prescriptions for how AtLAST should observe in order to maximize its transient science output without impinging on other science cases.

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