Key Science Goals for the Next Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA): Update from the ngVLA Science Advisory Council (2024)
In 2017, the next generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) Science Advisory Council, together with the international astronomy community, developed a set of five Key Science Goals (KSGs) to inform, prioritize and refine the technical capabilities of a future radio telescope array for high angular resolut...
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Zusammenfassung: | In 2017, the next generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) Science Advisory
Council, together with the international astronomy community, developed a set
of five Key Science Goals (KSGs) to inform, prioritize and refine the technical
capabilities of a future radio telescope array for high angular resolution
operation from 1.2 - 116 GHz with 10 times the sensitivity of the Jansky VLA
and ALMA. The resulting KSGs, which require observations at centimeter and
millimeter wavelengths that cannot be achieved by any other facility, represent
a small subset of the broad range of astrophysical problems that the ngVLA will
be able address. This document presents an update to the original ngVLA KSGs,
taking account of new results and progress in the 7+ years since their initial
presentation, again drawing on the expertise of the ngVLA Science Advisory
Council and the broader community in the ngVLA Science Working Groups. As the
design of the ngVLA has also matured substantially in this period, this
document also briefly addresses initial expectations for ngVLA data products
and processing that will be needed to achieve the KSGs. The original ngVLA KSGs
endure as outstanding problems of high priority. In brief, they are: (1)
Unveiling the Formation of Solar System Analogues; (2) Probing the Initial
Conditions for Planetary Systems and Life with Astrochemistry; (3) Charting the
Assembly, Structure, and Evolution of Galaxies from the First Billion Years to
the Present; (4) Science at the Extremes: Pulsars as Laboratories for
Fundamental Physics; (5) Understanding the Formation and Evolution of Stellar
and Supermassive Black Holes in the Era of Multi-Messenger Astronomy. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.14497 |