The wide-field, multiplexed, spectroscopic facility WEAVE: Survey design, overview, and simulated implementation
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Author
WEAVE consortium
Jin, Shoko
Trager, Scott C.
Dalton, Gavin B.
Aguerri, J. Alfonso L.
Drew, J. E.
Falcón-Barroso, Jesús
Gänsicke, Boris T.
Hill, Vanessa
Iovino, Angela
Pieri, Matthew M.
Poggianti, Bianca M.
Smith, D. J. B.
Vallenari, Antonella
Abrams, Don Carlos
Aguado, David S.
Antoja, Teresa
Aragón-Salamanca, Alfonso
Ascasibar, Yago
Babusiaux, Carine
Balcells, Marc
Barrena, R.
Battaglia, Giuseppina
Belokurov, Vasily
Bensby, Thomas
Bonifacio, Piercarlo
Bragaglia, Angela
Carrasco, Esperanza
Carrera, Ricardo
Cornwell, Daniel J.
Domínguez-Palmero, Lilian
Duncan, Kenneth J.
Famaey, Benoit
Fariña, Cecilia
Gonzalez, Oscar A.
Guest, Steve
Hatch, Nina A.
Hess, Kelley M.
Hoskin, Matthew J.
Irwin, Mike
Knapen, Johan H.
Monguió, Maria
Raddi, Roberto
Drake, Alyssa
Gledhill, T. M.
Hardcastle, Martin J.
Harris, Amy
Jarvis, Matt J.
Read, Shaun C.
Williams, Wendy L.
Wright, Nicholas J.
Attention
2299/26859
Abstract
WEAVE, the new wide-field, massively multiplexed spectroscopic survey facility for the William Herschel Telescope, will see first light in late 2022. WEAVE comprises a new 2-degree field-of-view prime-focus corrector system, a nearly 1000-multiplex fibre positioner, 20 individually deployable 'mini' integral field units (IFUs), and a single large IFU. These fibre systems feed a dual-beam spectrograph covering the wavelength range 366$-$959\,nm at $R\sim5000$, or two shorter ranges at $R\sim20\,000$. After summarising the design and implementation of WEAVE and its data systems, we present the organisation, science drivers and design of a five- to seven-year programme of eight individual surveys to: (i) study our Galaxy's origins by completing Gaia's phase-space information, providing metallicities to its limiting magnitude for $\sim$3 million stars and detailed abundances for $\sim1.5$ million brighter field and open-cluster stars; (ii) survey $\sim0.4$ million Galactic-plane OBA stars, young stellar objects and nearby gas to understand the evolution of young stars and their environments; (iii) perform an extensive spectral survey of white dwarfs; (iv) survey $\sim400$ neutral-hydrogen-selected galaxies with the IFUs; (v) study properties and kinematics of stellar populations and ionised gas in $z1$ million spectra of LOFAR-selected radio sources; (viii) trace structures using intergalactic/circumgalactic gas at $z>2$. Finally, we describe the WEAVE Operational Rehearsals using the WEAVE Simulator.