Understanding the Astrophysics of Galaxy Evolution: the role of spectroscopic surveys in the next decade
Eric Bell, Marc Davis, Arjun Dey, Pieter van Dokkum, Richard Ellis,, Daniel Eisenstein, Martin Elvis, Sandra Faber, Carlos Frenk, Reinhard Genzel,, Jenny Greene, Jim Gunn, Guinevere Kauffmann, Jill Knapp, Mariska Kriek, James, Larkin, Claudia Maraston, Kirpal Nandra

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of near-infrared spectroscopic surveys in understanding galaxy evolution from high redshifts to the present, proposing a design for a new multi-object spectrograph to facilitate this research.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed outline for a multi-object spectrograph covering 0.4 to 1.8 microns, aimed at advancing galaxy formation studies by characterizing galaxy populations up to redshift 2.
Findings
Progress in understanding galaxy evolution from z ~ 1 to now.
Need for near-IR spectroscopic surveys at high redshift.
Proposal for a new spectrograph to study galaxy formation.
Abstract
Over the last decade optical spectroscopic surveys have characterized the low redshift galaxy population and uncovered populations of star-forming galaxies back to z ~ 7. This work has shown that the primary epoch of galaxy building and black hole growth occurs at redshifts of 2 to 3. The establishment of the concordance LCDM cosmology shifted the focus of galaxy population studies from constraining cosmological parameters to characterizing the processes which regulate the formation and evolution of galaxies.In the next decade, high redshift observers will attempt to formulate a coherent evolutionary picture connecting galaxies in the high redshift Universe to galaxies today. In order to link galaxy populations at different redshifts, we must not only characterize their evolution in a systematic way, we must establish which physical processes are responsible for it. Considerable…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · History and Developments in Astronomy
