J-PAS: The Javalambre-Physics of the Accelerated Universe Astrophysical Survey
N. Benitez, R. Dupke, M. Moles, L. Sodre, J. Cenarro, A. Marin-Franch,, K. Taylor, D. Cristobal, A. Fernandez-Soto, C. Mendes de Oliveira, J., Cepa-Nogue, L.R. Abramo, J.S. Alcaniz, R. Overzier, C. Hernandez-Monteagudo,, E. J. Alfaro, A. Kanaan, J. M. Carvano, R.R.R. Reis

TL;DR
J-PAS is a wide-field, narrow-band photometric survey using a dedicated telescope to map the universe up to redshift 1.3, enabling precise cosmological measurements, galaxy evolution studies, and supernova detection with innovative filter technology.
Contribution
The paper introduces the J-PAS survey, a novel approach using 54 contiguous filters for efficient, high-precision cosmological and astrophysical observations from a dedicated 2.5m telescope.
Findings
Survey will observe 8500 sq.deg. of sky with high photo-z accuracy.
Expected to detect 700,000 galaxy clusters and groups.
Will produce a deep, multi-dimensional map of the Northern Sky.
Abstract
The Javalambre-Physics of the Accelerated Universe Astrophysical Survey (J-PAS) is a narrow band, very wide field Cosmological Survey to be carried out from the Javalambre Observatory in Spain with a purpose-built, dedicated 2.5m telescope and a 4.7 sq.deg. camera with 1.2Gpix. Starting in late 2015, J-PAS will observe 8500sq.deg. of Northern Sky and measure photo-z for LRG and ELG galaxies plus several million QSOs, sampling an effective volume of Gpc up to and becoming the first radial BAO experiment to reach Stage IV. J-PAS will detect galaxy clusters and groups, setting constrains on Dark Energy which rival those obtained from its BAO measurements. Thanks to the superb characteristics of the site (seeing ~0.7 arcsec), J-PAS is expected to obtain a deep, sub-arcsec image of the Northern sky, which combined with its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Technology and Applications · Particle Detector Development and Performance · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
