Astro2020 Science White Paper: Science Platforms for Resolved Stellar Populations in the Next Decade
Knut A.G. Olsen (1), Melissa Graham (2, 3), Dara Norman (1),, Stephanie Juneau (1), and Adam Bolton (1) ((1) National Optical Astronomy, Observatory, (2) University of Washington, (3) Large Synoptic Survey, Telescope)

TL;DR
The white paper discusses future prospects for resolved stellar populations research, emphasizing the importance of upcoming surveys, diverse facilities, data sharing, and computing advances to maximize scientific discovery in the next decade.
Contribution
It highlights the need for broad community access to data, integration of multiple facilities, and investment in science platform technology to enhance research capabilities.
Findings
Upcoming surveys will expand discovery spaces in stellar populations.
Data sharing and computing advances are crucial for future discoveries.
Multiple facilities will contribute complementary data for comprehensive studies.
Abstract
Over the past decade, research in resolved stellar populations has made great strides in exploring the nature of dark matter, in unraveling the star formation, chemical enrichment, and dynamical histories of the Milky Way and nearby galaxies, and in probing fundamental physics from general relativity to the structure of stars. Large surveys have been particularly important to the biggest of these discoveries. In the coming decade, current and planned surveys will push these research areas still further through a large variety of discovery spaces, giving us unprecedented views into the low surface brightness Universe, the high surface brightness Universe, the 3D motions of stars, the time domain, and the chemical abundances of stellar populations. These discovery spaces will be opened by a diverse range of facilities, including the continuing Gaia mission, imaging machines like LSST and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
