Scientists have created a gargantuan synthetic survey that
shows what we can expect from the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope’s future
observations. Though it represents just a small chunk of the real future
survey, this simulated version contains a staggering number of galaxies – 33
million of them, along with 200,000 foreground stars in our home galaxy.
This simulated Roman deep field image, containing hundreds of thousands of galaxies, represents just 1.3 percent of the synthetic survey, which is itself just one percent of Roman's planned survey. The full simulation is available here. The galaxies are color coded – redder ones are farther away and whiter ones are nearer. The simulation showcases Roman’s power to conduct large, deep surveys and study the universe statistically in ways that aren’t possible with current telescopes. Credits: M. Troxel and Caltech-IPAC/R. Hurt
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Scientific Visualization Studio
The simulation will help scientists plan the best observing strategies, test different ways to mine the mission's vast quantities of data, and explore what we can learn from tandem observations with other telescopes.
"The volume of data Roman will
return is unprecedented for a space telescope,” said Michael Troxel, an
assistant professor of physics at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.
“Our simulation is a testing ground we can use to make sure we will get the
most out of the mission’s observations.”
The team drew data from a mock universe originally developed to support science
planning with the
Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which is located in Chile and set to begin full
operations in 2024. Because the Roman and Rubin simulations use the same
source, astronomers can compare them and see what they can expect to learn from
pairing the telescopes’ observations once they’re both actively scanning the
universe.
A paper describing the results, led
by Troxel, has been accepted for publication in The Monthly Notices
of the Royal Astronomical Society.
This graphic compares the relative sizes of the synthetic image (inset, outlined in orange), the whole area astronomers simulated (the square in the upper-middle outlined in green), and the size of the complete future survey astronomers will conduct (the large square in the lower-left outlined in blue). The background, from the Digitized Sky Survey, illustrates how much sky area each region covers. The synthetic image covers about as much sky as a full moon, and the future Roman survey will cover much more area than the Big Dipper. While it would take the Hubble Space Telescope or James Webb Space Telescope around a thousand years to image an area as large as the future survey, Roman will do it in just over seven months. Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and M. Troxel
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Cosmic
Construction
Roman’s High Latitude Wide Area
Survey will consist of both imaging – the focus of the new simulation – and
spectroscopy across the same enormous swath of the universe. Spectroscopy
involves measuring the intensity of light from cosmic objects at different wavelengths,
while Roman’s imaging will reveal precise positions and shapes of hundreds of
millions of faint galaxies that will be used to map dark matter. Although this mysterious substance is invisible,
astronomers can infer its presence by observing its effects on regular matter.
Anything with mass warps the fabric
of space-time. The bigger the mass, the greater the warp. This creates an
effect called gravitational lensing, which happens when light from a distant
source becomes distorted as it travels past intervening objects. When those
lensing objects are massive galaxies or galaxy clusters, background sources can
be smeared or appear as multiple images.
This animation shows the type of science that astronomers will be able to do with future Roman deep field observations. The gravity of intervening galaxy clusters and dark matter can lens the light from farther objects, warping their appearance as shown in the animation. By studying the distorted light, astronomers can study elusive dark matter, which can only be measured indirectly through its gravitational effects on visible matter. As a bonus, this lensing also makes it easier to see the most distant galaxies whose light they magnify. Credits: Caltech-IPAC/R. Hurt
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Less massive objects can create
more subtle effects called weak lensing. Roman will be sensitive enough to use
weak lensing to see how clumps of dark matter warp the appearance of distant
galaxies. By observing these lensing effects, scientists will be able to fill
in more of the gaps in our understanding of dark matter.
“Theories of cosmic structure
formation make predictions for how the seed fluctuations in the early universe
grow into the distribution of matter that can be seen through gravitational
lensing,” said Chris Hirata, a physics professor at Ohio State University in
Columbus, and a co-author of the paper. “But the predictions are statistical in
nature, so we test them by observing vast regions of the cosmos. Roman, with
its wide field of view, will be optimized to efficiently survey the sky,
complementing observatories such as the James Webb Space Telescope that are
designed for deeper investigation of individual objects.”
Ground and
Space
The synthetic Roman survey covers
20 square degrees of the sky, which is roughly equivalent to 95 full moons. The
actual survey will be 100 times larger, unveiling more than a billion galaxies.
Rubin will scan an even greater area – 18,000 square degrees, nearly half of
the entire sky – but with lower resolution since it will have to peer through
Earth’s turbulent atmosphere.
Pairing the Roman and Rubin
simulations offers the first opportunity for scientists to try to detect the
same objects in both sets of images. That’s important because ground-based
observations aren’t always sharp enough to distinguish multiple, close sources
as separate objects. Sometimes they blur together, which affects weak lensing
measurements. Now, scientists can determine the difficulties and benefits of
“deblending” such objects in Rubin images by comparing them with Roman ones.
With Roman’s colossal cosmic view,
astronomers will be able to accomplish far more than the survey's primary
goals, which are to study the structure and evolution of the universe, map dark
matter, and discern between the leading theories that attempt to explain why
the expansion of the universe is speeding up. Scientists can comb through the
new simulated Roman data to get a taste of the bonus science that will come
from seeing so much of the universe in such exquisite detail.
“With Roman’s gigantic field of view, we anticipate many different scientific opportunities, but we will also have to learn to expect the unexpected,” said Julie McEnery, the senior project scientist for the Roman mission at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “The mission will help answer critical questions in cosmology while potentially revealing brand new mysteries for us to solve.”
This video begins by showing the most distant galaxies in the simulated deep field image in red. As it zooms out, layers of nearer (yellow and white) galaxies are added to the frame. By studying different cosmic epochs, Roman will be able to trace the universe's expansion history, study how galaxies developed over time, and much more. Credits: Caltech-IPAC/R. Hurt and M. Troxel
Download high-resolution video and images from NASA’s
Scientific Visualization Studio
The Nancy Grace Roman Space
Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, with participation by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and
Caltech/IPAC in Southern California, the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore, and a science team comprising scientists from various research
institutions. The primary industrial partners are Ball Aerospace and
Technologies Corporation in Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in
Melbourne, Florida; and Teledyne Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks,
California.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: Millions of Galaxies Emerge in New Simulated Images From NASA's Roman | NASA
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