Enabling Deep All-Sky Searches of Outer Solar System Objects
A foundational goal of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is to map the Solar System small body populations that provide key windows into understanding of its formation and evolution. This is especially true of the populations of the Outer Solar System -- objects at the orbit of Neptune $r &...
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Zusammenfassung: | A foundational goal of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is to map
the Solar System small body populations that provide key windows into
understanding of its formation and evolution. This is especially true of the
populations of the Outer Solar System -- objects at the orbit of Neptune $r >
30$AU and beyond. In this whitepaper, we propose a minimal change to the LSST
cadence that can greatly enhance LSST's ability to discover faint distant Solar
System objects across the entire wide-fast-deep (WFD) survey area.
Specifically, we propose that the WFD cadence be constrained so as to deliver
least one sequence of $\gtrsim 10$ visits per year taken in a $\sim 10$ day
period in any combination of $g, r$, and $i$ bands. Combined with advanced
shift-and-stack algorithms (Whidden et al. 2019) this modification would enable
a nearly complete census of the outer Solar System to $\sim 25.5$ magnitude,
yielding $4-8$x more KBO discoveries than with single-epoch baseline, and
enabling rapid identification and follow-up of unusual distant Solar System
objects in $\gtrsim 5$x greater volume of space. These increases would enhance
the science cases discussed in Schwamb et al. (2018) whitepaper, including
probing Neptune's past migration history as well as discovering hypothesized
planet(s) beyond the orbit of Neptune (or at least placing significant
constraints on their existence). |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1901.08549 |