Science with ASKAP. The Australian square-kilometre-array pathfinder
Abstract
The future of cm and m-wave astronomy lies with the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), a telescope under development by a consortium of 17 countries. The SKA will be 50 times more sensitive than any existing radio facility. A majority of the key science for the SKA will be addressed through large-area imaging of the Universe at frequencies from 300 MHz to a few GHz. The Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP) is aimed squarely in this frequency range, and achieves instantaneous wide-area imaging through the development and deployment of phase-array feed systems on parabolic reflectors. This large field-of-view makes ASKAP an unprecedented synoptic telescope poised to achieve substantial advances in SKA key science. The central core of ASKAP will be located at the Murchison Radio Observatory in inland Western Australia, one of the most radio-quiet locations on the Earth and one of the sites selected by the international community as a potential location for the SKA. Following an introductory description of ASKAP, this document contains 7 chapters describing specific science programmes for ASKAP. In summary, the goals of these programmes are as follows:
The detection of a million galaxies in atomic hydrogen emission across 75% of the sky out to a redshift of 0.2 to understand galaxy formation and gas evolution in the nearby Universe.- Publication:
-
Experimental Astronomy
- Pub Date:
- December 2008
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0810.5187
- Bibcode:
- 2008ExA....22..151J
- Keywords:
-
- Radio astronomy techniques;
- Radio telescopes;
- Square kilometre array;
- Very long baseline interferometry;
- Extragalactic HI;
- Radio continuum surveys;
- Cosmological evolution;
- Galaxy formation;
- Star formation;
- Rotation measure;
- Extragalactic radio source polarization;
- Galactic structure;
- Galactic magnetic field;
- Magellenic clouds;
- Pulsars;
- Radio transient sources;
- Gamma-ray bursters;
- Intra-day variability;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy. This submission contains only a summary of the full 120 page article which can be found at http://wwwatnf.atnf.csiro.au/projects/askap/newdocs/askap_expast08.pdf . Jasper Wall (UBC, Overall Editor)