Bibcode
Benítez, N.; Dupke, R.; Moles, M.; Sodré, L.; Cenarro, A. J.; Marín Franch, A.; Taylor, K.; Cristóbal, D.; Fernández-Soto, A.; Mendes de Oliveira, C.; Cepa-Nogué, J.; Abramo, L. R.; Alcaniz, J. S.; Overzier, R.; Hernández-Monteagudo, C.; Alfaro, E. J.; Kanaan, A.; Carvano, M.; Reis, R. R. R.; J-PAS collaboration
Referencia bibliográfica
Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics VIII, Proceedings of the XI Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society held on September 8-12, 2014, in Teruel, Spain, ISBN 978-84-606-8760-3. A. J. Cenarro, F. Figueras, C. Hernández-Monteagudo, J. Trujillo Bueno, and L. Valdivielso (eds.), p. 148-153
Fecha de publicación:
5
2015
Número de citas
11
Número de citas referidas
11
Descripción
J-PAS is a Spanish-Brazilian 8500 deg^2 Cosmological Survey which will
be carried out from the Javalambre Observatory with a purpose-built,
dedicated 2.5 m telescope and a 4.7 deg^2 camera with 1.2 Gpix. Starting
in 2015, J-PAS will use 59 filters to measure high precision 0.003(1+z)
photometric redshifts for 90M galaxies plus several million QSOs, about
50 times more than the largest current spectroscopic survey, sampling an
effective volume of ˜ 14 Gpc^3 up to z=1.3. J-PAS will not only be
first radial BAO experiment to reach Stage IV; it will also detect and
measure the mass of 7× 10^5 galaxy clusters and groups, setting
constrains on Dark Energy which rival those obtained from BAO
measurements. The combination of a set of 145 Å NB filters, placed
100 Å apart, and a multi-degree field of view is a powerful
``redshift machine'', equivalent to a 4000 multiplexing spectrograph,
but many times cheaper to build. The J-PAS camera is equivalent to a
very large, 4.7 deg^2 ``IFU'', which will produce a time-resolved, 3D
image of the Northern Sky with a very wide range of scientific
applications in Galaxy Evolution, Stellar Physics and the Solar System.