Why the Northern Hemisphere Needs a 30-40 m Telescope and the Science at Stake: Galactic Archaeology from the Northern Sky
Borja Anguiano, David Valls-Gabaud, Guillaume F. Thomas, David Mart\'inez Delgado, Alberto M. Mart\'inez-Garc\'ia, Andr\'es del Pino, Ivan Minchev, Patricia Sanchez-Blazquez, Carme Gallart, Teresa Antoja

TL;DR
A 30-meter northern telescope is crucial for detailed galactic archaeology, enabling high-resolution spectroscopy of faint stars to unravel the Milky Way's formation and dark matter structure, complementing southern facilities.
Contribution
Proposes a northern 30-meter telescope with advanced spectroscopic capabilities to address key unresolved questions in Milky Way archaeology and dark matter research.
Findings
Enables deep survey of faint stars out to 200 kpc.
Allows chemodynamical mapping of stellar streams.
Facilitates tomographic studies of the outer disk.
Abstract
By the 2040s--50s, facilities such as \emph{Gaia}, WEAVE, 4MOST, Rubin, \emph{Euclid}, \emph{Roman}, and the ESO ELT will have transformed our global view of the Milky Way. Yet key questions will remain incompletely resolved: a detailed reconstruction of the Galaxy's assembly from its earliest building blocks, and robust tests of dark matter granularity using the fine structure of the stellar halo and outer disk -- particularly in the Galactic anticenter. Addressing these questions requires high-resolution spectroscopy of faint main-sequence stars (typically 1--2 mag below the turnoff) and turnoff stars (--23) in low-surface-brightness structures: halo streams and shells, ultra-faint dwarf galaxies, the warped and flared outer disk, and anticenter substructures. We argue that addressing this science case requires a 30\,m-class telescope in the northern hemisphere, equipped…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
