Paving the way to simultaneous multi-wavelength astronomy
M. J. Middleton, P. Casella, P. Gandhi, E. Bozzo, G. Anderson, N., Degenaar, I. Donnarumma, G. Israel, C. Knigge, A. Lohfink, S. Markoff, T., Marsh, N. Rea, S. Tingay, K. Wiersema, D. Altamirano, D. Bhattacharya, W. N., Brandt, S. Carey, P. Charles, M. Diaz Trigo, C. Done

TL;DR
This paper reviews the importance and challenges of simultaneous multi-wavelength astronomy, emphasizing the need for coordinated observations to improve understanding of dynamic cosmic sources.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of multi-wavelength astronomy, highlighting current issues and proposing solutions to enhance future observational capabilities.
Findings
Multi-wavelength observations increase diagnostic power.
Temporal variability complicates multi-band data analysis.
Community consensus on future strategies is needed.
Abstract
Whilst astronomy as a science is historically founded on observations at optical wavelengths, studying the Universe in other bands has yielded remarkable discoveries, from pulsars in the radio, signatures of the Big Bang at submm wavelengths, through to high energy emission from accreting, gravitationally-compact objects and the discovery of gamma-ray bursts. Unsurprisingly, the result of combining multiple wavebands leads to an enormous increase in diagnostic power, but powerful insights can be lost when the sources studied vary on timescales shorter than the temporal separation between observations in different bands. In July 2015, the workshop "Paving the way to simultaneous multi-wavelength astronomy" was held as a concerted effort to address this at the Lorentz Center, Leiden. It was attended by 50 astronomers from diverse fields as well as the directors and staff of observatories…
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