WFIRST Science Investigation Team "Cosmology with the High Latitude Survey" Annual Report 2017
Olivier Dor\'e, Christopher Hirata, Yun Wang, David Weinberg, Ivano, Baronchelli, Andrew Benson, Peter Capak, Ami Choi, Tim Eifler, Shoubaneh, Hemmati, Shirley Ho, Albert Izard, Bhuvnesh Jain, Mike Jarvis, Alina, Kiessling, Elisabeth Krause, Elena Massara, Dan Masters

TL;DR
This report details the WFIRST mission's High Latitude Survey efforts in 2017 to improve cosmological measurements of cosmic acceleration, emphasizing systematic control and multiple observational probes for robust dark energy insights.
Contribution
The paper presents a comprehensive plan for integrated galaxy redshift, weak lensing, and cluster growth surveys to enhance dark energy research with systematic error mitigation.
Findings
Enhanced measurement precision by 1-2 orders of magnitude.
Integrated multi-probe approach for cross-validation.
Focus on systematic uncertainties control.
Abstract
Cosmic acceleration is the most surprising cosmological discovery in many decades. Testing and distinguishing among possible explanations requires cosmological measurements of extremely high precision probing the full history of cosmic expansion and structure growth and, ideally, compare and contrast matter and relativistic tracers of the gravity potential. This program is one of the defining objectives of the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST), as set forth in the New Worlds, New Horizons report (NWNH) in 2010. The WFIRST mission has the ability to improve these measurements by 1-2 orders of magnitude compared to the current state of the art, while simultaneously extending their redshift grasp, greatly improving control of systematic effects, and taking a unified approach to multiple probes that provide complementary physical information and cross-checks of cosmological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
