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The Submillimeter Array 1 David J. Wilner [email protected] What is the Submillimeter Array? The SMA is an exploratory instrument comprised of eight moveable 6 meter antennas designed for high spatial and spectral resolution imaging through semi-transparent submillimeter atmospheric windows. The SMA is a collaborative project of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, part of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (Taiwan) Why “Submillimeter” ? best part of electromagnetic spectrum to study “cool” material 3 Why a Submillimeter “Array” ? • resolution ~ /D: 1 arcsec at = 1 mm requires D = 200 meters! • interferometry: combine signals from separate small telescopes to synthesize a large one 4 Submillimeter Array Science • a unique and versatile telescope – Solar System bodies, protoplanetary disks, star forming regions, evolved star envelopes, black holes, nearby galaxies, ultraluminous galaxies at cosmological distances, … • in very high demand – more than 200 observing proposals per year – fewer than 1 out of 4 of submm requests accommodated – archive: data in public domain after 15 months • more than 200 papers in refereed journals – more than 1000 authors and co-authors – PhDs: Harvard, SAO predocs, Hawaii, Taiwan, … 5 Submillimeter Array Operations • dynamic queue scheduling according to weather • primary observations from Mauna Kea, remote from Hilo base facility, Cambridge, Taipei • SMAOC web portal for both operations and PIs to track projects from proposal through observations with up-to-minute information 6 SMA Science Examples Debris on Jupiter SgrA* Black Hole Planet Forming Disks Distant Galaxies 7 Cometary Debris on Jupiter • comet SL-9 impact in 1994 deposited material in Jovian atmosphere, fading over time SMA HCN J=3-2 • SMA images distribution of molecules, e.g. HCN • fate: downward transport at poles dominates photo-chemical evolution Moreno et al., 2010 8 Planet Forming Disks • images of dust and gas around ~1 Myr old stars at scale of our Solar System • initial conditions for planet building • significant fraction show inner holes: evidence for giant planets in formation NASA/JPL/T. Pyle (SSC) Andrews et al. 2010 Hughes et al. 2009 Brown et al. 2007, 2009 Early Universe Starbursts • half of luminous cosmic energy density comes from dust enshrouded sources • SMA observations locate dusty sources to <0.2 arcsec, enable multi- assessment • population of galaxies with extreme star formation when Universe was <20% of current age, invisible to Hubble Space Telescope Younger et al. 2007, 2009, 2010 10 Closest Look at a Black Hole • SgrA* at Galactic Center, 4 million times mass of Sun, largest black hole on the sky • Earth-size mm telescope! Hawaii-California-Arizona (SMA/JCMT-CARMA-SMT) – 37 arcsec scale emission size of event horizon – hot spot in accretion flow? • higher sensitivity planned to access time variable structure Doelman et al. 2008 11 SMA Outreach 12