The Science Case for Building a Band 1 Receiver Suite for ALMA
J. Di Francesco, D. Johnstone, B. Matthews, N. Bartel, L. Bronfman, S., Casassus, S. Chitsazzadeh, M. Cunningham, G. Duchene, A. Hales, M. Houde, D., Iono, P. M. Koch, R. Kothes, S.-P. Lai, S.-Y. Liu, B. Mason, T. Maccarone, G., Schieven, A. M. M. Scaife, D. Scott, H. Shang

TL;DR
This paper advocates for the development of ALMA's Band 1 receiver suite (35-52 GHz) by presenting diverse scientific cases, emphasizing its potential to advance studies from star formation to early universe galaxy observations.
Contribution
It introduces compelling science cases for ALMA Band 1, highlighting its unique capabilities and advantages over existing instruments like the JVLA for a broad range of astrophysical research.
Findings
Band 1 enables detailed study of grain evolution in protoplanetary disks.
Band 1 allows detection of CO 3-2 emission from high-redshift galaxies.
ALMA Band 1 offers comparable sensitivity to JVLA with greater imaging fidelity.
Abstract
We present a set of compelling science cases for the ALMA Band 1 receiver suite. For these cases, we assume in tandem the updated nominal Band 1 frequency range of 35-50 GHz with a likely extension up to 52 GHz; together these frequencies optimize the Band 1 science return. The scope of the science cases ranges from nearby stars to the re-ionization edge of the Universe. Two cases provide additional leverage on the present ALMA Level One Science Goals and are seen as particularly powerful motivations for building the Band 1 Receiver suite: (1) detailing the evolution of grains in protoplanetary disks, as a complement to the gas kinematics, requires continuum observations out to ~35 GHz (~9mm); and (2) detecting CO 3-2 line emission from galaxies like the Milky Way during the epoch of re-ionization, i.e., 6 < z < 10, also requires Band 1 receiver coverage. The range of Band 1 science is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuperconducting and THz Device Technology · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
