The James Webb Space Telescope North Ecliptic Pole Time-Domain Field -- I: Field Selection of a JWST Community Field for Time-Domain Studies
Rolf A. Jansen, Rogier A. Windhorst (ASU, School of Earth & Space, Exploration)

TL;DR
This paper details the selection of a unique JWST field in the North Ecliptic Pole for time-domain studies, enabling diverse transient and variability research with minimal foreground interference.
Contribution
It identifies the only optimal sky region for JWST time-domain observations, facilitating new scientific investigations without background or observational constraints.
Findings
Field is free of bright foreground stars and low Galactic extinction.
Enables high-cadence, multi-wavelength time-domain observations.
Initial spectrophotometric characterization will reach m_AB ~ 28.8 mag.
Abstract
We describe the selection of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) Time-Domain Field (TDF), a ~14' diameter field located within JWST's northern Continuous Viewing Zone (CVZ) and centered at (RA, Dec)_J2000 = (17:22:47.896, +65:49:21.54). We demonstrate that this is the only region in the sky where JWST can observe a clean (i.e., free of bright foreground stars and with low Galactic foreground extinction) extragalactic deep survey field of this size at arbitrary cadence or at arbitrary orientation, and without a penalty in terms of a raised Zodiacal background. This will crucially enable a wide range of new and exciting time-domain science, including high redshift transient searches and monitoring (e.g., SNe), variability studies from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) to brown dwarf atmospheres, as well as proper motions of possibly extreme scattered Kuiper Belt and…
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