Validation of the Scientific Program for the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument
DESI Collaboration: A. G. Adame, J. Aguilar, S. Ahlen, S. Alam, G., Aldering, D. M. Alexander, R. Alfarsy, C. Allende Prieto, M. Alvarez, O., Alves, A. Anand, F. Andrade-Oliveira, E. Armengaud, J. Asorey, S. Avila, A., Aviles, S. Bailey, A. Balaguera-Antol\'inez, O. Ballester

TL;DR
The paper validates the DESI scientific program through survey validation, demonstrating its capability to produce large, precise spectroscopic samples for cosmology and galaxy studies over five years.
Contribution
It presents the final target selection algorithms, redshift distributions, and projected cosmological constraints based on survey validation data.
Findings
DESI will complete the 14,000 deg$^2$ survey with millions of spectroscopic targets.
Statistical precision of BAO measurements will be below 0.5% across multiple redshift ranges.
Survey validation confirmed the effectiveness of target selection and survey strategies.
Abstract
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) was designed to conduct a survey covering 14,000 deg over five years to constrain the cosmic expansion history through precise measurements of Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO). The scientific program for DESI was evaluated during a five month Survey Validation (SV) campaign before beginning full operations. This program produced deep spectra of tens of thousands of objects from each of the stellar (MWS), bright galaxy (BGS), luminous red galaxy (LRG), emission line galaxy (ELG), and quasar target classes. These SV spectra were used to optimize redshift distributions, characterize exposure times, determine calibration procedures, and assess observational overheads for the five-year program. In this paper, we present the final target selection algorithms, redshift distributions, and projected cosmology constraints resulting from those…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Scientific Research and Discoveries
