GEMINI OBSERVATORY
observing time request (HTML summary)

Semester: 2003BPartner reference:
Not Available
PI time requested:
10.0 hours
Gemini reference:
Not Available
Partner ranking:
Not Available
PI minimum time requested:
1.0 nights
Instruments(s):
GMOS North
NTAC recommended time:
0.0 nights
PI future time requested:
40.0 hours
Observing mode: queueNTAC minimum recommended:
0.0 nights
PI total from all partners: 60.0 hours
(joint proposals)
Time awarded:
Not Available
Proposal submitted to: United States
...also submitted to...United Kingdom, Canada
(joint proposals)


Title:The Nature of Dark Energy from Type Ia Supernovae
Principal Investigator:Saul Perlmutter
PI institution:Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, MS 50-232,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Berkeley, CA 94720,USA
PI status:PhD/Doctorate
PI phone / fax / e-mail:510-486-5203 / / saul@lbl.gov
Principal Contact:Isobel Hook
PC institution:University of Oxford
PC phone / fax / e-mail:44-1865-283106 / / imh@astro.ox.ac.uk
Co-investigators:Reynald Pain: CNRS/IN2P3 LPNHE, Universites Paris VI and VII , Reynald.Pain@in2p3.fr
Chris Pritchet: University of Victoria, pritchet@uvic.ca
Ray Carlberg: University of Toronto, carlberg@astro.utoronto.ca
Isobel Hook: University of Oxford, imh@astro.ox.ac.uk
James Rich: CEA Saclay, james.rich@cea.fr
Richard McMahon: University of Cambridge, rgm@ast.cam.ac.uk
Robert Knop: Vanderbilt University, r.knop@vanderbilt.edu
Greg Aldering: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, GAldering@LBL.gov
Eric Smith: Vanderbilt University, eric.a.smith@vanderbilt.edu
D. Andy Howell: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, DAHowell@lbl.gov
Lifan Wang: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, lifan@panisse.lbl.gov
Vitaliy Fadayev: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, VAFadeyev@lbl.gov
Rachel Gibbons: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, ragibbons@lbl.gov
Robert Vogel: UC Berkeley (Physics), rvogel@socrates.berkeley.edu
Anthony Spadafora: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, ALSpadafora@lbl.gov

Abstract: Type Ia supernovae (SNeIa) provide direct evidence for an accelerating universe, and for the existence of "dark energy'' driving that expansion. The CFHT Legacy Survey (CFHTLS ) has now begun to deliver detections ,and well-sampled g'r'i'z' light curves, for Type Ia supernovae out to redshifts of order unity (~1000 SNeIa expected over 5 years). Using these data, we will obtain a precise measurement of the cosmological parameters (Omega_mass, Omega_Lambda); our goal is to determine the cosmological equation of state parameter w to a precision of better than +-0.10, and hence test theories for the origin of the universal acceleration.

The goal for Gemini this semester is to obtain types and redshifts for ~60 SNeIa out to z~=0.9. This will provide a high quality SNeIa sample comparable in size to existing SNeIa samples, but with superior photometry, light-curve sampling, and colour information. Gemini observations represent vital component of our overall spectroscopic followup strategy, which also involves the ESO VLT, Keck, and Magellan telescopes.


Science Justification

The acceleration of the expansion of the universe was revealed almost four years ago by two independent teams using the Hubble diagram of type Ia supernovae (SNeIa) (Riess etal. 1998, AJ 116, 1009; Perlmutter etal. 1999, ApJ 517, 565). This approach remains the most direct and model-free way of measuring the cosmic acceleration. The ``Standard Model'' that emerges is that the present universe is flat; the energy component that dilutes with the expansion, i.e. matter, amounts to one third of the total energy content today. The remainder, often called "Dark Energy'', does not dilute with expansion: its density decreases slowly or not at all with time. The key parameter to be determined is the equation of state parameter w, which relates the pressure and the density of the universe (through w=P/rho). For instance, a classical fixed cosmological constant yields w=-1, whereas other models, such as quintessence, yield values greater than -1.

Our goal is to distinguish between these models (which arise from fundamental physics) using direct geometric distance measurements of supernovae. To do this requires a concerted program to find ~1000 SNeIa at 0.2<z<1 (more than 10x the current sample), and obtain multi-colour (g'r'i'z') light curves with excellent (2-3d) sampling. (The multicolour observations improve reddening determinations; the time sampling is essential for measuring maximum light and determining the light curve "scale factor", which correlates with maximum light brightness.) Note that our goal for the CFHTLS SN survey is to determine <w>, the time-average value of w, with a precision of +/- 0.10. The next step in this work will be to study the time dependence of the dark energy, w(z) - an even more demanding task that will require a future survey, such as SNAP.

THE CFHT LEGACY SURVEY

The CFHT Legacy Survey (CFHTLS) is tailor-made for this purpose (202 nights of telescope time over 5 years, more than 500 epochs on four 1 sq deg fields, typical photometric sampling every ~2 days rest-frame, g'r'i'z' filters plus some u*, and almost real-time SN triggers - see http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/Science/CFHTLS for more information). This unsurpassed "rolling search" strategy is possible thanks both to queue scheduling of CFHT, and to an enormous commitment of telescope time; it leads to improved efficiency for spectroscopic followup because: (1) it allows us to monitor the rise of the object and trigger spectroscopy at maximum light; (2) the flux of the target is well known since it is measured one or two days before max; this allows us an improved estimate of exposure time; (3) the detection of objects uses a lightcurve rather than a single flux difference.

THIS PROPOSAL

This application is to enable the vital spectroscopic classification of the candidate SNeIa from the CFHTLS imaging survey. Spectroscopy also provides an accurate estimate of the redshift to the SNeIa. The confirmed sample of SNeIa will be used to obtain a precise measurement of the cosmological parameters (Omega_mass,Omega_Lambda) and a measurement of the equation of state of the dark energy w with a precision of better than +-0.10 (1000 SNe) when combined with weak lensing constraints - see Fig. 2. The goal for this semester is to confirm ~60 SNeIa (z<~0.9) at Gemini.

This proposal is part of a well-organized international collaboration aimed at a precise measurement of cosmological parameters using the CFHTLS. The collaboration involves astronomers in Canada and France, as the lead agencies of the the CFHTLS; it also comprises groups in the USA, UK, and Europe. Spectroscopic followup time has been committed at the VLT and at Keck in 2003A; time is also being applied for at Keck in future semesters (PI Perlmutter) and Magellan (PI Carlberg, with additional observations by Magellan staff). More details of the spectroscopic followup strategy appear below.

DISCUSSION

Supernova observations can be subjected to many straightforward tests to check for systematic effects. The CFHTLS u*g'r'i'z' data can be used to measure SN colours and hence test for reddening by comparison with colours for nearby SNe. (We have other collaborative plans to use IR data to extend colour measurements to the highest redshift objects in our sample at z~0.9.). In addition we will have a large enough sample to be able to study subsets divided by host galaxy type (derived from the host galaxy spectra or high resolution imaging), or galactocentric radius - this allows us to check for effects associated with changes in the underlying host galaxy population (metallicity, extinction, age), similar to the study of Sullivan et al (2003 MNRAS, in press). The SN spectra themselves can be stacked to obtain a high S/N mean spectrum for different host galaxy types or z ranges; these can be compared against local SN spectra to check for small evolutionary effects.

This project is the first step in measuring w: it will assume constant w, and test the possibility that the dark energy is just the cosmological constant, i.e. the zero-point energy of the vacuum -- perhaps the simplest, best known dark energy model. Although the primary goal is to study SNeIa, some objects will turn out to be core collapse SNe. These are of interest in their own right (for measuring star formation rate as a function of z, and for studying the recently-discovered [Hamuy etal] relation between max brightness and envelope expansion velocity).

Attachments:

NameSourceType
Figs 1 and 2: Constraints on cosmological parameters from CFHTLS SNegemini_figures_page.psPS

Technical Justification

GMOS OBSERVATIONS

We propose to use the GMOS spectrographs on Gemini N/S to obtain types and redshifts of supernovae with roughly 0.6<z<0.9. (Given the overheads with Gemini, it is most efficient to use GMOS on these fainter objects.) Based on our previous work (Hook, Perlmutter etal) these SNe will have I=23-24; GMOS exposures of up to 3600s will be needed, although in some cases 1800s will be sufficient. The goal in this proposal is to identify ~60 SNeIa in 2003B. Assuming overheads of 1800s per object and an equal split of 1800s and 3600s per target, a total of 60hr is requested. With experience, it may be possible to reduce overheads below 1800s.

All observations will use a 0.75" slit, the R400_G5305 grating, and OG515 order sorting filter. Our experience shows that the dispersion of the R400 grating (~2A/pix) gives excellent sky subtraction, and we can rebin the data ~10x afterwards for redshifts and SN typing. Nod-and-shuffle will be used for the faintest objects. Given the time between SN discovery and spectroscopic observation, it is unfortunately not possible to design masks for multislit observations, though this option may be possible in the future.

Gemini types and redshifts will be made public within a month of the observations being received from the Gemini Project Office.

SCHEDULING AND LOGISTICS

SNeIa will be discovered, and reach maximum light, throughout the semester. Thus observing time should be spread through the entire semester. We will obtain SN ID's in almost real time at CFHT (~24 hr turnaround), and will constantly update our Phase 2 proposal.

Jim Rich will be in charge of managing the distribution of SN ID's to the various telescopes involved in spectroscopy. In preparation for a given night, he will check the results of previous nights of spectroscopy, make a prioritized candidate list, and dispatch objects on this list to various telescopes. Gemini operations coordinator will be Isobel Hook (our contact for Phase 2 purposes).

INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION

Spectroscopy on 8m class telescopes is essential for this project to succeed; the total amount of 8m time needed is well beyond the reach of any one group or nation. Our strategy for spectroscopic followup has progressed rapidly over the past few months, and at present is as follows:

o Gemini (this proposal) - We are applying for 6 nights per semester (1 US, 3 Canada, 2 UK). We have a preference for GMOS-N because of the lower fringing of the GMOS-N detectors, hence this US proposal is for GMOS-N only. However we would be able to use time on either telescope if that is easier to scehdule, and indeed overall we are applying for a balance of time roughly in the proportion 2:1 N:S.

o ESO VLT - FORS1 time has been allocated over the next 2 years (60 hrs in 2003A, 60hrs in 2003B). The PI is R. Pain; this group consists of French and other European collaborators.

o Keck - Perlmutter has been granted 3 nights of Keck time in Semester 2003A for this project and will also apply for 4 nights each in 04A and 05A. (The need for extra semester A time is discussed below.)

o Magellan - We will apply for 2-3 nights of Canadian time on Magellan. Carnegie scientists have also agreed to an informal arrangement in which they take spectra of z<~0.6 SNe in exchange for use of these SNe ID's for their own program of IR followup.

The following should be noted:

(1) Gemini time plays a key role in our observations. The time is essential for observations of the Groth strip (1419+52 - not observable from Chile) in semester A; it is essential for SN coverage in May-July, when the weather is bad in Chile. Finally, Gemini is queue-scheduled, a fact that makes the time enormously useful for observations of transient objects, compared to block-scheduled telescopes such as Keck.

(2) The DEEP survey team (S. Faber PI) has agreed in principle to coordinating our observations with DEEP survey observations; this potentially optimizes or increases our Keck allocation. R. Ellis has agreed to provide a few SN spectra and types in the Groth strip; in exchange we provide him with ID's and photometry to complement his high resolution followup. (Our first attempt at this will be in the Mar 20 - Apr 10 dark period.)

(3) Allowing for overheads, and for time lost to weather and misidentifications (e.g. AGN's, SNeII), the total spectroscopic time to be allocated will allow the followup of roughly 200 SNeIa per year.

Space does not allow for a complete list of the collaboration members. The Co-I's on this proposal represent the core group; see www.astro.uvic.ca/~pritchet/SN/03Bco-i.html for a complete list.

FUTURE TIME

Though the CFHTLS is a 5 year program, the first two years of the spectroscopy (~240 hr total) are critical: observations over this period will enable a first estimate of w with reasonable errors. We will also submit proposals with time requests like this one in 04A, 04B, and 05A. A detailed analysis of the photometric properties of SNe may provide an alternative to spectroscopic typing in the future.


Observation Details

ObservationRADecBrightnessTotal Time
(including overheads)
CFHTLS-D102:26:00.00-04:30:005.0 hours
     GSC0469400380 (wfs)2:25:55.044-4:35:44.1613.49 magseparation 5.87
     observing conditions: SN spec resources:
CFHTLS-D422:15:31.00-17:40:005.0 hours
     GSC0169302208 (wfs)22:15:51.70122:12:05.1511.84 magseparation 2,392.09
     observing conditions: SN spec resources:

Resources

Observing Conditions
NameImage QualitySky BackgroundWater VaporCloud Cover
SN spec 70%50%Any50%

Scheduling Information:

Synchronous dates:

Optimal dates:

Impossible dates:


Additional Information


Keyword Category: Extra Galactic

Keywords: Cosmological distance scale, Dark matter, Survey

Publications:

Allocations:
ReferenceTime% UsefulComment
GN2001A-Q-1012.0 hours50This was a joint proposal with GN2001A-Q-16 (submitted to the U.S. TAC) to observe distant supernovae with NIRI. Both were ranked highly and the full amount of requested time (35hrs) was awarded by the respective TACs. Because of cancellation of the queue this program was not carried out in queue mode. However it was used as a test program for NIRI SV (broadband imaging mode with the f/6 camera). About 12 hours of useful data were obtained, approximately half of our original request (when overheads are taken into account). We intend to obtain a final reference image for this SN with NIRI in semester 02B.
GN2002A-Q-3012.0 hoursThis was a joint proposal with GN2002A-Q18 (submitted to U.S. TAC) for GMOS observations of distant supernovae. Some data was acquired and a paper is in preparation.
GN2002A-Q-3112.0 hoursThis was a joint proposal with GN2002A-Q37 (submitted to U.S. TAC) for NIRI observations of distant supernovae. Some data obtained. Paper in preparation
GN2002A-Q-756.5 hoursThis was a joint proposal with GN2002A-Q9 (submitted to Candian TAC) for GMOS spectroscopy of z>5 QSO candidates. Program completed and paper in preparation.


Proposal Contents

Summary
Investigators
Abstract
Science Justification
Technical Justification
Observation Details
Allocation Committee Comments
Additional Information