Glenn, Jason, Bradford, C. Matt, Amini, Rashied, Moore, Bradley, Benson, Andrew, Armus, Lee, Katherine, Alatalo, Darling, Jeremy, Day, Peter, Domber, Jeanete, Farrah, Duncan, Fyhrie, Adalyn, Hensley, Brandon, Lipscy, Sarah, Redding, David, Rogers, Michael, Shannon, Mark, Steeves, John, Tucker, Carole ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1851-3918, Wu, Gordon and Zmuidzinas, Jonas 2018. The Galaxy Evolution Probe: a concept for a mid and far-infrared space observatory. Presented at: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation, 2018, Austin, Texas, USA, 10-15 June 2018. Proceedings Volume 10698, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave. , vol.10698 SPIE, 106980L. 10.1117/12.2314076 |
Abstract
The Galaxy Evolution Probe (GEP) is a concept for a mid and far-infrared space observatory designed to survey sky for star-forming galaxies from redshifts of z = 0 to beyond z = 4. Furthering our knowledge of galaxy formation requires uniform surveys of star-forming galaxies over a large range of redshifts and environments to accurately describe star formation, supermassive black hole growth, and interactions between these processes in galaxies. The GEP design includes a 2 m diameter SiC telescope actively cooled to 4 K and two instruments: (1) An imager to detect star-forming galaxies and measure their redshifts photometrically using emission features of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. It will cover wavelengths from 10 to 400 μm, with 23 spectral resolution R = 8 filter-defined bands from 10 to 95 μm and five R = 3.5 bands from 95 to 400 μm. (2) A 24 - 193 μm, R = 200 dispersive spectrometer for redshift confirmation, identification of active galactic nuclei, and interstellar astrophysics using atomic fine-structure lines. The GEP will observe from a Sun-Earth L2 orbit, with a design lifetime of four years, devoted first to galaxy surveys with the imager and second to follow-up spectroscopy. The focal planes of the imager and the spectrometer will utilize KIDs, with the spectrometer comprised of four slit-coupled diffraction gratings feeding the KIDs. Cooling for the telescope, optics, and KID amplifiers will be provided by solar-powered cryocoolers, with a multi-stage adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator providing 100 mK cooling for the KIDs....
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
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Date Type: | Published Online |
Status: | Published |
Schools: | Physics and Astronomy |
Publisher: | SPIE |
Last Modified: | 27 Apr 2023 12:45 |
URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/156723 |
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