Simulating infrared spectro-photometric surveys with a SPRITZ
L. Bisigello, C. Gruppioni, F. Calura, A. Feltre, F. Pozzi, C., Vignali, L. Barchiesi, G. Rodighiero, M. Negrello, F.J. Carrera, K.M. Dasyra,, J.A. Fern\'andez-Ontiveros, M. Giard, E. Hatziminaoglou, H. Kaneda, E. Lusso,, M. Pereira-Santaella, P.G. P\'erez-Gonz\'alez, C. Ricci

TL;DR
This paper uses the SPRITZ simulation to evaluate the potential of a SPICA-like space telescope for infrared photometric and spectroscopic surveys, revealing its ability to study dust-obscured galaxies and galaxy evolution up to high redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces the SPRITZ simulation framework to assess the capabilities of a SPICA-like mission for infrared galaxy observations, comparing it with other proposed telescopes.
Findings
SPICA-like mission can observe bright and normal galaxies up to high redshifts.
Spectroscopic data can estimate redshifts and analyze galaxy physical properties.
The mission provides a comprehensive 3D view of dust-obscured universe.
Abstract
Mid- and far-infrared (IR) photometric and spectroscopic observations are fundamental to a full understanding of the dust-obscured Universe and the evolution of both star formation and black hole accretion in galaxies. In this work, using the specifications of the SPace Infrared telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics (SPICA) as a baseline, we investigate the capability to study the dust-obscured Universe of mid- and far-IR photometry at 34 and 70 m and low-resolution spectroscopy at 17-36 m using the state-of-the-art Spectro-Photometric Realisations of Infrared-selected Targets at all-z (SPRITZ) simulation. This investigation is also compared to the expected performance of the Origins Space Telescope and the Galaxy Evolution Probe. The photometric view of the Universe of a SPICA-like mission could cover not only bright objects (e.g. L>10L) up to z=10,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCalibration and Measurement Techniques
