Astronomers have released a set of more than a million simulated images showcasing the cosmos as NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will see it. This preview will help scientists explore a myriad of Roman’s science goals.
“We used a supercomputer to create a
synthetic universe and simulated billions of years of evolution, tracing every
photon’s path all the way from each cosmic object to Roman’s detectors,” said
Michael Troxel, an associate professor of physics at Duke University in Durham,
North Carolina, who led the simulation campaign. “This is the largest, deepest,
most realistic synthetic survey of a mock universe available today.”
This video begins with a tiny one-square-degree
portion of the full OpenUniverse simulation area (about 70 square degrees,
equivalent to an area of sky covered by more than 300 full moons). It spirals
in toward a particularly galaxy-dense region, zooming by a factor of 75. This
simulation showcases the cosmos as NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope
could see it, allowing scientists to preview the next generation of cosmic
discovery now. Roman’s real future surveys will enable a deep dive into the universe
with highly resolved imaging, as demonstrated in this video.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and M. Troxel
The project, called OpenUniverse, relied on the now-retired Theta
supercomputer at the DOE’s (Department of Energy’s) Argonne National Laboratory
in Illinois. The supercomputer accomplished a process that would take over
6,000 years on a typical computer in just nine days.
In addition to Roman, the
400-terabyte dataset will also preview observations from the Vera C. Rubin
Observatory, which is jointly funded by the National Science Foundation and the
U.S. Department of Energy, and approximate simulations from ESA’s (the European
Space Agency’s) Euclid mission, which has NASA contributions. The Roman data is
available now here, and the Rubin and Euclid data will soon follow.
The team used the most sophisticated modeling of the universe’s underlying physics available and fed in information from existing galaxy catalogs and the performance of the telescopes’ instruments. The resulting simulated images span 70 square degrees, equivalent to an area of sky covered by more than 300 full moons. In addition to covering a broad area, it also covers a large span of time — more than 12 billion years.
Each tiny dot in the image at left is a galaxy
simulated by the OpenUniverse campaign. The one-square-degree image offers a
small window into the full simulation area, which is about 70 square degrees
(equivalent to an area of sky covered by more than 300 full moons), while the
inset at right is a close-up of an area 75 times smaller (1/600th the size of
the full area). This simulation showcases the cosmos as NASA’s Nancy Grace
Roman Space Telescope could see it. Roman will expand on the largest space-based
galaxy survey like it – the Hubble Space Telescope’s COSMOS survey – which
imaged two square degrees of sky over the course of 42 days. In only 250 days,
Roman will view more than a thousand times more of the sky with the same
resolution.
The project’s immense space-time coverage shows scientists how the
telescopes will help them explore some of the biggest cosmic mysteries. They
will be able to study how dark energy (the mysterious force thought to be accelerating the universe’s
expansion) and dark matter (invisible matter, seen only through its gravitational influence on
regular matter) shape the cosmos and affect its fate. Scientists will get
closer to understanding dark matter by studying its gravitational effects on
visible matter. And by studying the simulation’s 100 million synthetic
galaxies, they will see how galaxies and galaxy clusters evolved over eons.
Repeated mock observations of a
particular slice of the universe enabled the team to stitch together movies
that unveil exploding stars crackling across the synthetic cosmos like fireworks. These
starbursts allow scientists to map the expansion of the simulated universe.
This simulation showcases the dynamic universe as
NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could see it over the course of its
five-year primary mission. The video sparkles with synthetic supernovae from
observations of the OpenUniverse simulated universe taken every five days
(similar to the expected cadence of Roman’s High-Latitude Time-Domain Survey,
which OpenUniverse simulates in its entirety). On top of the static sky of
stars in the Milky Way and other galaxies, more than a million exploding stars
flare into visibility and then slowly fade away. To highlight the dynamic
physics happening and for visibility at this scale, the true brightness of each
transient event has been magnified by a factor of 10,000 and no background
light has been added to the simulated images. The video begins with Roman’s
full field of view, which represents a single pointing of Roman’s camera, and
then zooms into one square.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and M. Troxel
Scientists are now using OpenUniverse data as a testbed for creating an
alert system to notify astronomers when Roman sees such phenomena. The system
will flag these events and track the light they generate so astronomers can
study them.
That’s critical because Roman will
send back far too much data for scientists to comb through themselves. Teams
are developing machine-learning algorithms to determine how best to filter
through all the data to find and differentiate cosmic phenomena, like various
types of exploding stars.
“Most of the difficulty is in
figuring out whether what you saw was a special type of supernova that we can
use to map how the universe is expanding, or something that is almost identical
but useless for that goal,” said Alina Kiessling, a research scientist at
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California and the principal
investigator of OpenUniverse.
While Euclid is already actively
scanning the cosmos, Rubin is set to begin operations late this year and Roman
will launch by May 2027. Scientists can use the synthetic images to plan the
upcoming telescopes’ observations and prepare to handle their data. This prep
time is crucial because of the flood of data these telescopes will provide.
In terms of data volume, “Roman is
going to blow away everything that’s been done from space in infrared and
optical wavelengths before,” Troxel said. “For one of Roman’s surveys, it will
take less than a year to do observations that would take the Hubble or James
Webb space telescopes around a thousand years. The sheer number of objects
Roman will sharply image will be transformative.”
This synthetic OpenUniverse 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 the dark matter magnifies.
Caltech-IPAC/R. Hurt
“We can expect an incredible array of exciting, potentially Nobel
Prize-winning science to stem from Roman’s observations,” Kiessling said. “The
mission will do things like unveil how the universe expanded over time, make 3D
maps of galaxies and galaxy clusters, reveal new details about star formation
and evolution — all things we simulated. So now we get to practice on the
synthetic data so we can get right to the science when real observations
begin.”
Astronomers will continue using the
simulations after Roman launches for a cosmic game of spot the differences.
Comparing real observations with synthetic ones will help scientists see how
accurately their simulation predicts reality. Any discrepancies could hint at
different physics at play in the universe than expected.
“If we see something that doesn’t
quite agree with the standard model of cosmology, it will be extremely
important to confirm that we’re really seeing new physics and not just
misunderstanding something in the data,” said Katrin Heitmann, a cosmologist and
deputy director of Argonne’s High Energy Physics division who managed the
project’s supercomputer time. “Simulations are super useful for figuring that
out.”
OpenUniverse, along with other simulation tools being developed by Roman’s Science
Operations and Science Support centers, will prepare astronomers for the large
datasets expected from Roman. The project brings together dozens of experts
from NASA’s JPL, DOE’s Argonne, IPAC, and several U.S. universities to
coordinate with the Roman Project Infrastructure Teams, SLAC, and the Rubin
LSST DESC (Legacy Survey of Space and Time Dark Energy Science Collaboration).
The Theta supercomputer was operated by the Argonne Leadership Computing
Facility, a DOE Office of Science user facility.
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 BAE Systems, Inc in Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in Rochester, New York; and Teledyne Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks, California.
By Ashley
Balzer
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: New Simulated Universe Previews Panoramas From NASA’s Roman Telescope - NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment