Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
New Windows on Star Formation in the Cosmos October 11-13, 2004 U. of Maryland The Dusty and Molecular Universe A prelude to HERSCHEL and ALMA 27 - 29 October 2004, Paris ALMA Update Al Wootten NRAO Tuesday Lunch U. Of Md. Tuesday Lunch 2 Dusty04 http://aramis.obspm.fr/DUSTY04/plan.html Tuesday Lunch 3 Dusty04—Herschel Schedule Tuesday Lunch 4 Tuesday Lunch 5 Tuesday Lunch 6 HIFI Tuesday Lunch 7 PACS Tuesday Lunch 8 SPIRE Tuesday Lunch 9 ALMA: Current Definition • 64 moveable 12-m antennas: ‘100-m class telescope’ • Baselines from 15m to 15km – Angular resolution ~40 mas at 100 GHz (5mas at 900GHz) – Strong implications for atmospheric phase correction scheme • Receivers: low-noise, wide-band (8GHz), dual-polarisation, SSB – Many spectral lines per band • Digital correlator, >=8192 spectral channels, 4 Stokes – very high spectral resolution (up to 15kHz) • Short spacing data provided by 12-m antennas in single-dish mode – Critical for objects bigger than the primary beam • Requirements for star formation and high-z studies are remarkably similar! Tuesday Lunch 10 Summary of detailed requirements Frequency 30 to 950 GHz (initially only 84-720 GHz) Bandwidth 8 GHz, fully tunable Spectral resolution 31.5 kHz (0.01 km/s) at 100 GHz Spatial resolution <0.01” (18.5 km baseline at 650 GHz) Dynamic range 10000:1 (spectral); 50000:1 (imaging) Flux sensitivity Sub-mJy in <10 min (median conditions) Antenna complement 64 antennas of 12m diameter Polarization All cross products simultaneously Tuesday Lunch 11 Management – JAO Staffing Joint Alma Office (JAO) in Chile: – – – – – – Director: Project Manager: Project Engineer: Project Scientist: Project Controller: Logistics Officer: Massimo Tarenghi Tony Beasley Rick Murowinski Vacant Richard Simon (interim) Charlotte Hermant Tuesday Lunch 12 Agreement (2/2) Tuesday Lunch 13 Primary Scientific Requirements • ALMA will be a flexible observatory supporting a wide range of scientific investigations in extragalactic, galactic and planetary astronomy. • ALMA should be “easy to use” (i.e. you do not need to be an expert in aperture synthesis to produce images). • Three scientific requirements drive the science planning. These are the “Primary Scientific Requirements”. Tuesday Lunch - de Breuck 14 Primary Scientific Requirements • The ability to detect spectral line emission from CO or CII in a normal galaxy like the Milky Way at a redshift of 3, in less than 24 hours of observation. • The ability to image the gas kinematics in protostars and protoplanetary disks around young Sun-like stars at a distance of 150 pc, enabling one to study their physical, chemical and magnetic field structures and to detect the gaps created by planets undergoing formation in the disks. (see John Richer’s talk) • The ability to provide precise images at an angular resolution of 0.1”. Here the term ‘precise images’ means representing to within the noise level the sky brightness at all points where the brightness is greater than 0.1% of the peak image brightness. This requirement applies to all sources visible to ALMA that transit at an elevation greater than 20°. Tuesday Lunch 15 Detecting normal galaxies at z=3 • CO emission now detected in 25 z>2 objects. • To date only in luminous AGN and/or gravitationally lensed. Normal galaxies are 20 to 30 times fainter. • Current millimeter interferometers have collecting areas between 500 and 1000 m2. Tuesday Lunch 16 Detecting normal galaxies at z=3 ALMA sensitivity depends on: 1.Atmospheric transparency: Chajnantor plateau at 5000m altitude is superior to all existing mm observatories. 2.Noise performance of receivers: can be reduced by factor 2 (approaching quantum limit). Also gain √2 because ALMA will simultaneously measure both states of polarization. 3.Collecting area: remaining factor of 7 to 10 can only be gained by increasing collecting area to >7000 m2. Tuesday Lunch 17 Detecting normal galaxies at z=3 •At z=3, the 10 kpc molecular disk of the Milky Way will be much smaller than the primary beam → single observation. •Flux density sensitivity in image from an interferometric array with 2 simultaneously sampled polarizations and 95% quantum efficiency is: •Aperture efficiencies 0.45<εa<0.75 can be achieved (25 µm antenna surface accuracy). • Tsys depends on band, atmosphere, … for 115 GHz, Tsys =67 K obtainable. Tuesday Lunch 18 Detecting normal galaxies at z=3 •Total CO luminosity of Milky Way: L’co(1-0) = 3.7x108 K km s-1pc2 (Solomon & Rivolo 1989). • COBE found slightly higher luminosities in higher transitions (Bennett et al 1994) → adopt L’co = 5x108 K km s-1pc2. • At z=3 → observe (3-2) or (4-3) transition in the 84-116 GHz atmospheric band → need to correct, but also higher TCMB providing higher background levels for CO excitation. • Different models predict brighter or fainter higher-order transitions. Few measurements of CO rotational transitions exist for distant quasars and ULIRGs, but these are dominated by central regions. → Assume L’co(3-2) / L’co(1-0) = 1. Tuesday Lunch 19 Detecting normal galaxies at z=3 • For ΛCDM cosmology, Δv=300 km/s, the expected peak CO(3-2) flux density is 36 µJy. • Require 5σ detection in 12h on source (16h total time). → ND2=7300 m2. • Achievable with N=64 antennas of D=12m diameter. Tuesday Lunch 20 Precise 0.1” resolution images • 0.1” resolution needed to complement contemporary facilities: JWST, eVLA, AO with 8-10m telescopes, … • High angular resolution and sensitivity complementary. • High fidelity images require a sufficiently large number of baselines to fill >50% of the uv-plane. • Short tracking (<2 hours) to reduce atmospheric variations → requires ND > 560 for a maximum baseline of 3 km. • Achievable with 64 12m antennas. Tuesday Lunch 21 Precise 0.1” resolution images • Array cannot measure smallest spatial frequencies (<D). • Solve by having four antennas optimized for total power measurements (nutating secondaries). • Remaining gap in uv-plane filled in by Atacama Compact Array (ACA): 12 antennas 7m diameter. Tuesday Lunch 22 Design Reference Science Plan • 128 projects; full list available from http://www.alma.nrao.edu • Use ALMA sensitivity calculator: http://www.eso.org/projects/alma/science/bin /sensitivity.html • Total time: 3-4 years of ALMA observing. Tuesday Lunch 23 Design Reference Science Plan Tuesday Lunch 24 Molecular line studies of submm galaxies •>50% of the FIR/submm background are submm galaxies. • Trace heavily obscured star-forming galaxies. • Optical/near-IR identification very difficult. • Optical spectroscopy: <z>~2.4. • Confirmation needed with CO spectroscopy. Tuesday Lunch 25 Molecular line studies of submm galaxies • ALMA will provide 0.1” images of submm sources found in bolometer surveys (LABOCA/APEX, SCUBA2/JCMT) or with ALMA itself. • 3 frequency settings will cover the entire 84-116 GHz band → at least one CO line. (1h per source) • Confirm with observation of high/lower order CO line. (1h per source) Tuesday Lunch 26 Molecular line studies of submm galaxies • Follow-up with ALMA: • High resolution CO imaging to determine morphology (mergers?), derive rotation curves → Mdyn, density, temperature, ... (1h per source) • Observe sources in HCN to trace dense regions of star-formation. (10h per source, 20 sources) Total: 12h per source, 170h for sample of 50 sources. Tuesday Lunch - end de Breuck 27 Millimeter VLBI – Imaging the Galactic center black hole (Falcke 2000) Kerr R_g = 3 uas Schwarzschild Model: opt. thin synch 0.6 mm VLBI 1.3 mm VLBI 16uas res 33 uas res Tuesday Lunch - CC 28 Enabling technology III: Wideband spectroscopy – Redshifts for obscured/faint sources: 8 - 32 GHz spectrometers on ALMA, LMT, GBT (Min Yun 04, Harris 04) L_FIR = 1e13 L_sun ALMA Tuesday Lunch - CC 29 Tuesday Lunch 30 Andre Tuesday Lunch 31 ALMA “Level 0” Requirements • Image gas kinematics in protostars and protoplanetary disks around Sun-like stars at 140pc distance, enabling one to study their physical, chemical and magnetic field structures and to detect the gaps created by planets undergoing formation in the disk. • Provide precise images at 0.1 arcsec resolution. Precise means representing within the noise level the sky brightness at all points where the brightness is greater than 0.1% of the peak image brightness. This applies to all objects transiting at >20 degree elevation. Tuesday Lunch - JSR 32 • Good match to weather statistics and science Tuesday Lunch 33 Frequency band capabilities • • • • Band 3: 84-116GHz. FOV = 60 arcsec – Continuum: ff/dust separation, optically-thin dust, dust emissivity index, grain size – SiO maser, low excitation lines CO 1-0 (5.5K), CS 2-1, HCO+ 1-0, N2H+… Band 6: 211-275GHz. FOV = 25 arcsec – Dust SED – Medium excitation lines: CO 2-1 (16K), HCN 3-2, … Band 7: 275-373GHz. FOV = 18 arcsec – Continuum: most sensitive band for dust. – Wave plate at 345GHz for precision polarimetry – Medium-high excitation lines: CO 3-2 (33K), HCN 4-3, N2D+, … Band 9: 602-720GHz. FOV = 9 arcsec – Towards peak of dust SED, away from Rayleigh Jeans; hence T(dust) – High excitation lines e.g. CO 6-5 (115K), HCN 8-7 in compact regions Tuesday Lunch 34 Diffraction limited imaging needs phase correction • Water fluctuations typically 500m1000m above site • Correct by Fast Switching of antennas to QSO, plus Water Vapor Radiometry Tuesday Lunch 35 Star Forming Regions are complex • Such as DR21 at roughly 3 Kpc (Marston et al. IRAC) Tuesday Lunch - Walmsley 36 Serpens at 3mm and 100 microns (Testi priv.comm) n HSO Survey of Nearby SFR OVRO 3mm : P. Saraceno M. Benedettini, A. di Giorgio, S.Tuesday Molinari, S. Pezzuto, S. Viti Lunch - Walmsley : L. Testi, P. Caselli PACS m 37 Fundamental steps forward with Herschel • PACS : Maps of star forming regions in continuum and OI 63 micron line • SPIRE : Maps on the large scale (eg of galactic plane, see Molinari HIGAL poster) • HIFI : Water and detailed kinematics of star forming regions Tuesday Lunch 38 Initial Conditions: Pre-collapse Cores • Strong chemical gradients and clumpiness • Indicates depletion and chemical evolution • ALMA mosaic at 3mm: 100 pointings plus singledish data needed • ALMA can resolve 15AU scales in nearby cores, or study cores at 1000AU scales out to 10kpc Tuesday Lunch L1498: Tafalla et al. 39 Small-scale Core dynamics: infall Extended 0.1 - 0.3 pc Walsh et al Di Francesco et al (2001) Tuesday Lunch 40 Starless Core Chemistry: probing the depletion zones • Complete CNO depletion CS, CO, within 2500AU? • ALMA can study this region, in objects as far as the GC, in H2D+ HCO+ NH3, N2H+ H2 D + D2 H + 2,500AU 8,000AU 372GHz line 15,000AU Tuesday Lunch Walmsley et al. 2004; Caselli et al 2003 41 Role of Magnetic Fields? (Figure by A. Chrysostomou) L1544: Ward-Thompson et al 2000 Tuesday Lunch (Crutcher et al) 42 Star formation in crowded environments Bate 2002 Tuesday Lunch Protostars and Clumps in Perseus: Hatchell et al 2005. • ALMA can resolve 15AU scales at Taurus • Clump mass function down to 0.1 Jupiter masses • Onset of multiplicity • BD formation • Internal structure of clumps • Turbulence on43AU scales Molecular Outflows Chandler & Richer 1999 170AU resolution • • • Origin of flows down to 1.5AU scales – 10 mas resolution at 345 GHz: • 24 hours gives 5K rms at 20 km/s resolution – Resolve magnetosphere: X or disk winds? – Flow rotation? Proper motions – 0.2 arcsec per year for 100km/s at 100pc – Resolve the cooling length Resolve multiple outflow regions Tuesday Lunch Beuther et al, 2002 44 Spatially-resolved Spectral Surveys Kuan et al 2004 8GHz bandwidth Schilke et al Tuesday Lunch 45 Disk around young stars • Current arrays have done about 20 sources... (e.g. IRAM PdB Survey) • ALMA sensitivity 50 times better ... • ALMA could do hundreds of sources in continuum, to a much better level, and at much higher angular resolution Tuesday Lunch - Guilloteau 48 Zooming on inner disks • Nice, circularly symmetric, Keplerian disks don’t really exist • E.g. AB Aur 1.3 mm image at 0.6” resolution: “spiral” density enhancements 100 AU from the star (black: IR from Fukagawa et al 2004, White: mm from Piétu et al 2004) • Are such phenomena common? Long-lived ? Tuesday Lunch - SG 49 Stellar Masses (and more) • From the (Keplerian) rotation curve, measured from CO (Simon et al 2000) • Temperature from CO isotopes (Dartois et al 2003) • A sample of 40 sources, in CO and its isotopes at 0.2” resolution requires 2600 hours of ALMA ! Tuesday Lunch - SG 50 Transition Disks ? • • • • ALMA can image the “débris” disks around (young) stars But also perhaps unveil the transition stage between proto-planetary disks and “débris” disks Small disks just being found: e.g. BP Tau (Dutrey et al 2003) But studies will require long integration time even with ALMA (>> 10 hours / object) Tuesday Lunch - SG 51 Long term schedule • Proper motions can be measured with ALMA • Clumps in “debris” disks ( evidence for planets ?) • Orbital motions of proto-stellar condensations in massive star forming regions • Plan in advance and for the long term... Tuesday Lunch - SG 52 Imaging Protoplanetary Disks • Protoplanetary disk at 140pc, with Jupiter mass planet at 5AU • ALMA simulation Gueth, Henning, – 428GHz, bandwidth 8GHz Wolf, & Kley 2002, ApJ 566, L97 – total integration time: 4h – max. baseline: 10km • Contrast reduced at higher frequency as optical depth increases • Will push ALMA to its limits Tuesday Lunch - JSR 53 “Debris” disk spectroscopy with Spitzer Tuesday Lunch 55 Rieke et al 2004 “Debris” Disk imaging with ALMA Fomalhaut (Greaves et al) Vega (Holland et al) • Wyatt (2004) model: dust trapped in resonances by migrating planets in disk • ALMA will revolutionise studies of the large cold grains in other planetary systems Tuesday Lunch 56 Pierce-Price, Richer, et al 2000 Star Formation at the Galactic Centre SCUBA 850 micron: Pierce-Price et al 2000 • ALMA could map one square degree at 350GHz in 180 hours to – 0.7mJy sensitivity – This is 0.15 solar masses at 20K – confusion limited unless resolution high • 1 arcsec beam (8500AU) would give – ΔT=0.6K at 1 km/s resolution • Possible lines in 2x4GHz passband: – – – – – USB: SiO 8-7, H13CO+ 4-3, H13CN 4-3, CO 3-2 LSB: CH3CN, CH3OH Or USB: HCN 4-3, HCO+ 4-3 LSB: H13CN 4-3, CS 7-6, CO 3-2 Tuesday Lunch 57 SCUBA 450 micron Final Remarks • ALMA’s unique role will be imaging down to few AU scales in nearby star forming regions with a sensitivity of a few Kelvin – Protostellar and protoplanetary disks – Accretion, rotation and outflow deep in the potential well – Chemistry and dust properties at high spatial resolution – Will require excellent operation on long baselines • Study star formation across the Galaxy • Modest resolution observations (0.5 arcsec or so) will be important too – Good brightness sensitivity • ALMA has a narrow field of view – Need surveys with single dishes to feed ALMA • Many targets extended over several primary beams – Need high-quality short spacing data to make precise images and for flux ratio experiments Tuesday Lunch 58 Site – Road Construction 1 Road Construction • There are 42Km of road being constructed between Highway 23 outside San Pedro de Atacama to the AOS via the OSF giving ALMA its own private road network. • Initial construction started in 2003 and the road was opened in time for the Ground Breaking ceremony in November. • Commencing in June 2004 the final construction is now taking place to consolidate the existing road and make it suitable for the main construction and operations phases. Tuesday Lunch - JSR final 59 Tuesday Lunch 60 GPS track on site image Tuesday Lunch 61 Site – Road Construction 2 Right of Way Concession Tuesday Lunch 62 Site – Road Construction 3 To AOS OSF Site Tuesday Lunch 63 Site – Road Construction 4 View West Road at 18Km Tuesday Lunch View East 64 Site – ALMA Camp 1 ALMA Camp • The permanent ALMA camp at the OSF is currently being used by members of the site IPT. Further expansion is planned over the following year to allow accommodation of all ALMA staff during the main integration phase. • The camp will also be used during the operations phase and it is planned to augment the facilities with a Residence building housing about 100 visiting staff and observers. • At the same time a Contractors camp is being built nearby to house the contractors workforce during the construction phase. Tuesday Lunch 65 Site – ALMA Camp 2 Inner Court ALMA Camp – General View Typical Office Tuesday Lunch 66 ALMA Board at ALMA Camp Grill Tuesday Lunch 67 Tuesday Lunch 68 Site – OSF 1 Operations Support Facility • The OSF is the main facility for operations and maintenance of the array. Situated at 2900m it will offer a modern, comfortable and safe environment from which both scientific observation and routine maintenance can be conducted. • The design of the OSF encompasses workshop facilities, integration facilities and maintenance areas for both the current baseline ALMA and the enhanced design to include the contribution of Japan. In addition the array operations centre and associated observing facilities are all contained within the same campus. Tuesday Lunch 69 Visitors Center Residence Area OSF Camps and Technical Facilities Access Road to Visitors Center Contractors Camp ALMA Camp Tuesday Lunch 70 Site – AOS 1 Array Operation Site • The AOS complex houses the Correlator and Local Oscillator equipment together with limited workshop facilities and emergency overnight accommodation. It is not intended to have any staff permanently stationed at the AOS and all operations will be conducted remotely from the AOS. • The layout of the array foundations has been completed with a total of 216 pads. The original compliment of 256 pads has been reduced with no compromise to the ALMA science. Tuesday Lunch 71 Site – AOS Building 1 Tuesday Lunch 72 Tuesday Lunch 73 Tuesday Lunch 74 Tuesday Lunch 75