GEMINI OBSERVATORY observing time request (HTML summary) |
Semester: 2004B | Partner reference: Not Available | PI time requested: 10.0 hours | ||
Gemini reference: Not Available | Partner ranking: Not Available | PI minimum time requested: 10.0 hours | ||
Instruments(s): GMOS North | NTAC recommended time: 0.0 nights | PI future time requested: 120.0 hours | ||
Observing mode: queue | NTAC 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: | SNLS and the Nature of Dark Energy from Type Ia Supernovae |
Principal Investigator: | Saul Perlmutter |
PI institution: | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Physics Division,1 Cyclotron Road BLDG 50R5032,Berkeley, CA 94720-8160,USA |
PI status: | PhD/Doctorate |
PI phone / fax / e-mail: | 510-486-5203 / 510-486-6738 / 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: | Rob Knop: Vanderbilt University, robert.a.knop@vanderbilt.edu Isobel Hook: University of Oxford, imh@astro.ox.ac.uk Reynald Pain: CNRS-IN2P3, Paris, Reynald.Pain@in2p3.fr James Rich: CEA-Saclay, james.rich@cea.fr Chris Pritchet: University of Victoria, pritchet@uvic.ca Ray Carlberg: Vanderbilt UniversityUniversity of Toronto, carlberg@astro.utoronto.ca Anthony Spadafora: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, ALSpadafora@lbl.gov Vitaliy Fadeyev: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, VAFadeyev@lbl.gov Eric Smith: Vanderbilt University, eric.a.smith@vanderbilt.edu Andy Howell: University of Toronto, howell@astro.utoronto.ca Mark Sullivan: University of Toronto, sullivan@astro.utoronto.ca Tom Merrall: University of Toronto, merrall@astro.utoronto.ca Don Neill: University of Victoria, neill@astro.columbia.edu Kathy Perrett: University of Toronto, perrett@astro.utoronto.ca Richard McMahon: University of Cambridge, rgm@ast.cam.ac.uk Nick Walton: University of Cambridge, naw@ast.cam.ac.uk Justin Bronder: University of Oxford, jtb@astro.ox.ac.uk David Balam: University of Victoria, cosmos@uvic.ca |
The spectroscopic follow-up to these detections involves most of the world's major telescopes (VLT, Keck, Magellan), and Gemini plays a pivotal role within this collaboration - the high sensitivity obtained through GMOS nod and shuffle observations has proved crucial for following up the faintest, most distant targets. The goal for Gemini this semester is to obtain types and redshifts for ~30 SNe Ia candidates out to z~=0.9, contributing to a very large, high quality and homogeneous SN Ia data set with photometry, light-curve sampling, and colour information superior to that in all previous studies.
This proposal falls under the QR (quick response) category, for which the triggers are supernova discoveries from the CFHT Legacy Survey.
SNLS and CFHTLS: The CFHT Legacy Survey (CFHTLS) has allocated 202 nights of queue-scheduled telescope time over 5 years to SNLS, providing more than 500 epochs on four 1 square degree fields sampled every ~2 days rest-frame in g'r'i'z' filters, with almost real-time SN triggers (see http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/Science/CFHTLS for more information). This unsurpassed "rolling search" strategy is possible thanks to both 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 near maximum light; (2) the flux of the target is known since it is measured one or two days before spectroscopic observation, allowing an accurate estimate of exposure time; and (3) pre-maximum colours and fluxes allow excellent discrimination of SNe Ia from other events (e.g. SNe II, AGN, and variable stars). The SNLS team is now routinely delivering SN detections and photometry within 12-24 hr of data being taken (Fig. 1). The reader is referred to the Technical Justification for more information, and to http://cfht.hawaii.edu/SNLS/ for "up-to-the-minute" information on SN discoveries.
THIS PROPOSAL: This application is to obtain vital spectroscopic classifications and redshifts for candidate SNLS SNe. The confirmed sample of SNe Ia 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, assuming w is constant) when combined with weak lensing constraints - see Fig. 3. The goal for this semester is to obtain spectroscopy for 30 SNe Ia candidates (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, as well as groups in the USA, UK, and Europe. Spectroscopic followup time has been committed at the VLT with time being applied for at Keck (PI Perlmutter) and Magellan (PI Carlberg). 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 g'r'i'z' data can be used to measure SN colours and hence test for reddening by comparison with colours of 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 study subsets divided by host galaxy type (derived from the host galaxy spectra, CFHTLS colours, 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 340, 1057). The SN spectra themselves can be stacked to obtain a high S/N mean spectrum for different host galaxy types or redshift ranges; these can be compared against local SN spectra to check for subtle evolutionary effects. Statistical studies of individual spectral features are possible and have been started with the semester 2003B data. Although the primary goal is to study SNe Ia, some objects will turn out to be core collapse SNe. These are of interest in their own right, for example measuring star formation rate as a function of redshift, and for studying the relation between max brightness and envelope expansion velocity (Hamuy etal, astro-ph/0309122).
Name | Source | Type |
Figures 1-3 | GeminiProp2004figures.eps | EPS |
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 large GMOS overheads, it is most efficient to use GMOS on these fainter, higher redshift objects. Based on results from the recently-completed first semester of Gemini follow-up (2003B), these SNe will have i'=23-24.5, and GMOS exposures of around 1.5hrs are needed. Assuming overheads of 1800s per object, we request 60hr (total from all partners) in order to observe approximately 30 SN candidates in 2004A. With future changes to setup procedures (for example, accurate blind offsetting, see below) it should be possible to reduce current overheads.
All observations will use a 0.75" slit, the R400_G5305 grating, and OG515 order sorting filter. The slit PA is chosen to pass through both SN and host galaxy. Our experience shows that the dispersion of the R400 grating (~2A/pix) gives excellent nod and shuffle sky subtraction, and we can rebin the data ~10x afterwards for redshifts and SN typing. We routinely use nod and shuffle for the fainter targets, allowing us to confirm and classify many i'=24 candidates (Fig. 2).
Guide stars: The coordinates quoted here are the coordinates for the main search fields. The exact coordinates of targets and associated guide stars will be entered into the Phase II file when known. We have had no difficulty in finding guide stars.
We will continue to make SN types and redshifts from Gemini public within a month of the observations being received from the Gemini Project Office.
PROGRESS AND SCIENCE PLANS
The SNLS team achieved huge gains during Semester 2003B. Several new pipelines were developed, including one to do near-final reductions of spectroscopy, and spectroscopic type determination via fits to template SNe, within minutes of the receipt of the data via ftp from Gemini. This allows us to give the queue next-day feedback on whether or not more integration time is required on our targets. Our photometry pipeline was also refined, and real-time light curve fitting was implemented, enabling photo-z and type estimations of candidates before they are sent for spectroscopy. The only setbacks during the semester were beyond our control: the weather at Mauna Kea was significanty below average, and MegaCam was still ramping up in efficiency in 2003B (see http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/Instruments/Queue/2003b_report.html for the official CFHT report on MegaCam in 03B.).
The result of these efforts is that there now exist about 130 reliable SN detections with excellent light curves out to z >0.9, of which about 45 have been spectroscopically identified as Ia's. (See http://cfht.hawaii.edu/SNLS/ for the latest SN discoveries). For comparison, all previous high-z searches over the past 10 years have combined to produce ~100 SNe Ia. A typical CFHTLS queue run produces ~20 high-z SNe per month. We fully expect to achieve our goal of 4-5 epochs (4 filters, 2 fields) in each lunation for future semesters.
To date we have Gemini spectra of 24 targets from 55 hours of observations (including overheads). Six example spectra are shown in Fig. 2; see http://cfht.hawaii.edu/SNLS/ for statistics of observations. We have successfully demonsrated multi-slit SNe observing (using legacy survey data) on Keck-II/DEIMOS, and anticipate similar success with GMOS when fast-turnaround MOS capability becomes available.
OVERHEADS
Nod and shuffle is working well (7 minute overhead per 30 minute observations), and we are already experimenting with the new electronic offsetting to further reduce this overhead. Our largest overhead is target acquisition. During 2003B we tested blind offseting to acquire our targets, but found that offsets over 25" are not accurate enough for reliable acquisition. We are cooperating with the Observatory to improve the GMOS offsetting accuracy (which involves better calibration of the GMOS OIWFS pointing model) so that blind offsetting can be used routinely for this program and by the general community.
SCHEDULING AND LOGISTICS
As SNe Ia will be discovered, and reach maximum light, throughout the semester, Observing time should be spread throughout 2004B. We will obtain SN detections in almost real time at CFHT (<24 hr turnaround), and will constantly update our Phase 2 proposal.
S. Basa, I. Hook, A. Howell, and M. Sullivan are in charge of managing the distribution of SN ID's to the various 8m telescopes. In preparation for a given night, they check the results of previous nights of spectroscopy, make a prioritized candidate list, and dispatch objects on this list to various telescopes. The Gemini observations 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 follow-up is as follows:
o Gemini (this proposal) - We are applying for 60 hrs per semester (30 hrs Canada, 20hrs UK, 10 hrs US). This ratio recognizes the fact that our US collaborators are contributing 4 nights of Keck time, and the UK contributes via ESO/VLT time.
o ESO VLT - FORS1 time has been allocated over the first 2 years of the survey (60 hrs each in 2003A, 2003B, 2004A and 2004B). The PI is R. Pain; this group consists of UK, French and other European collaborators.
o Keck - Perlmutter et al. provide 3 nights of Keck time every "A" Semester to observe the Northern-most field not visible from VLT/Gemini-S. o Magellan - 2-3 nights of Canadian time per semester 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 is queue-scheduled. This is enormously useful for observations of transient objects, compared to block-scheduled telescopes such as Keck.
(2) The DEEP survey team (PI: S. Faber) is coordinating their Groth Strip (D3) observations with the Permutter Keck SNLS nights, effectively increasing our Keck allocation. Since March 2003 R. Ellis and collaborators have been providing SN spectra and types in CFHTLS fields; in exchange we provide Ellis et al. with ID's and photometry to complement their high S/N spectroscopic study.
(3) Allowing for overheads, and for time lost to weather and non-Ia identifications (e.g. AGN's, SNe II), the total spectroscopic time (over all telescopes) will allow the followup of roughly 200 SNe Ia per year.
FUTURE TIME
Observations over the first two years of the survey are critical, and will provide a first estimate of w with reasonable errors (see Fig. 3). A detailed analysis of the photometric properties of SNe may provide an alternative to spectroscopic typing in the future.
Rollover: We request that this program be approved for rollover into 2005A. In general we aim to use our time evenly throughout the semester (since candidates are discovered throughout), and this means we must "hold back" a number of hours for the last lunation of the semester. This held-back time is wasted if the weather is bad in the last month. Rollover would provide insurance against losing this time altogether, and allow us to obtain the required number of confirmed supernovae.
Name | Source | Type |
Figures 1-3 | GeminiProp2004figures.eps | EPS |
Observation | RA | Dec | Brightness | Total Time (including overheads) |
CFHTLS-D2 | 10:00:28.60 | +02:12:21.0 | 4.0 hours | |
GSC0024401641 (oiwfs) | 10:00:30.266 | 2:09:07.49 | 14.44 mag | separation 3.25 |
observing conditions: SN spec | resources: GMOS-N | |||
CFHTLS-D1 | 02:26:00.00 | -04:30:00.0 | 3.0 hours | |
GSC0469401164 (oiwfs) | 2:26:06.778 | -4:33:11.16 | 10.96 mag | separation 3.61 |
observing conditions: SN spec | resources: GMOS-N | |||
CFHTLS-D4 | 22:15:31.67 | -17:44:05.7 | 3.0 hours | |
GSC0638100714 (oiwfs) | 22:15:12.084 | -17:39:06.62 | 15.27 mag | separation 6.83 |
observing conditions: SN spec | resources: GMOS-N |
Resources
Observing Conditions
Name | Image Quality | Sky Background | Water Vapor | Cloud Cover |
SN spec | 70% | 50% | Any | 50% |
Scheduling Information:
Synchronous dates:
Optimal dates:
Keywords: Cosmological distance scale, Dark matter, Survey
Publications:
Allocations:
Reference | Time | % Useful | Comment |
ESO VLT 2004A | 60.0 hours | French + other European collaborators time on FORS1 (VLT) for CFHTLS SN followup; 60 hr allocated in 2003B, 60 hr 2004A, plus more time guaranteed in 2004B. The PI is R. Pain. | |
GN-2004A | 60.0 hours | Followup spectroscopy for CFHTLS supernovae. | |
GN-2003B-Q-9 | 45.0 hours | 100 | Followup spectroscopy for CFHTLS supernovae. |
GS-2003B-Q-8 | 15.0 hours | 63 | Followup spectroscopy for CFHTLS supernovae. |
GN-2003A-Q-1 | 60.0 hours | 100 | "Gemini Deep Deep Survey" (Abraham, McCarthy, Carlberg et al) |
GN-2002B-Q-30 | 10.3 hours | 100 | Joint proposal with U.S. (Knop et al) for NIRI and GMOS follow up of SNeIa. Only GMOS time was awarded by the UK TAC, and all this was used. |
GN2002B-Q-36 | 23.0 hours | 0 | Simard PI - HDF N disk kinematics. No data taken due to heavy schedule of telescope shutdowns and instrument commissioning. |
Gemini 02A/B | 10.0 nights | 95 | "Gemini Deep Deep Survey" (Abraham, McCarthy, Carlberg et al) [includes ~5 nights science verification] |
Gemini 02A | 14.0 hours | 75 | "Star formation around High z QSO's" (Pritchet, Hartwick, Carlberg et al). Paper in preparation. |
GN2002A-Q-30 | 12.0 hours | Hook PI. This 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-31 | 12.0 hours | Hook PI. This 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-75 | 6.5 hours | Hook PI. This 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. | |
GN2001A-Q-10 | 12.0 hours | 50 | This 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. |