Wide-Field InfrarRed Survey Telescope-Astrophysics Focused Telescope Assets WFIRST-AFTA 2015 Report
- Creators
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Spergel, D.
- Gehrels, N.
- Baltay, C.
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Bennett, D.
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Breckinridge, J.
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Donahue, M.
- Dressler, A.
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Gaudi, B. S.
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Greene, T.
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Guyon, O.
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Hirata, C.
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Kalirai, J.
- Kasdin, N. J.
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Macintosh, B.
- Moos, W.
- Perlmutter, S.
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Postman, M.
- Rauscher, B.
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Rhodes, J.
- Wang, Y.
- Weinberg, D.
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Benford, D.
- Hudson, M.
- Jeong, W.-S.
- Mellier, Y.
- Traub, W.
- Yamada, T.
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Capak, P.
- Colbert, J.
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Masters, D.
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Penny, M.
- Savransky, D.
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Stern, D.
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Zimmerman, N.
- Barry, R.
- Bartusek, L.
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Carpenter, K.
- Cheng, E.
- Content, D.
- Dekens, F.
- Demers, R.
- Grady, K.
- Jackson, C.
- Kuan, G.
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Kruk, J.
- Melton, M.
- Nemati, B.
- Parvin, B.
- Poberezhskiy, I.
- Peddie, C.
- Ruffa, J.
- Wallace, J. K.
- Whipple, A.
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Wollack, E.
- Zhao, F.
- WFIRST Study Office
- Science Definition Team
Abstract
This report describes the 2014 study by the Science Definition Team (SDT) of the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) mission. It is a space observatory that will address the most compelling scientific problems in dark energy, exoplanets and general astrophysics using a 2.4-m telescope with a wide-field infrared instrument and an optical coronagraph. The Astro2010 Decadal Survey recommended a Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope as its top priority for a new large space mission. As conceived by the decadal survey, WFIRST would carry out a dark energy science program, a microlensing program to determine the demographics of exoplanets, and a general observing program utilizing its ultra wide field. In October 2012, NASA chartered a Science Definition Team (SDT) to produce, in collaboration with the WFIRST Study Office at GSFC and the Program Office at JPL, a Design Reference Mission (DRM) for an implementation of WFIRST using one of the 2.4-m, Hubble-quality telescope assemblies recently made available to NASA. This DRM builds on the work of the earlier WFIRST SDT, reported by Green et al. (2012) and the previous WFIRST-2.4 DRM, reported by Spergel et. (2013). The 2.4-m primary mirror enables a mission with greater sensitivity and higher angular resolution than the 1.3-m and 1.1-m designs considered previously, increasing both the science return of the primary surveys and the capabilities of WFIRST as a Guest Observer facility. The addition of an on-axis coronagraphic instrument to the baseline design enables imaging and spectroscopic studies of planets around nearby stars.
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 78699
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170629-130428473
- Created
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2017-06-30Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-06-02Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- COSMOS, SPLASH, Infrared Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC)