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Galaxy evolution studies with the SPace IR telescope for cosmology and astrophysics (SPICA): The power of IR spectroscopy
Author(s)
Spinoglio, L.
Alonso-Herrero, Almudena
Armus, Lee
Baes, Maarten
Bernard-Salas, Jeronimo
Bianchi, Simone
Bocchio, Marco
Bolatto, Alberto D.
Bradford, Charles Matt
Braine, Jonathan
Carrera, Francisco J.
Ciesla, Laure
Clements, David L.
Dannerbauer, Helmut
Doi, Yasuo
Egami, Eiichi E.
Fernández-Ontiveros, Juan Antonio
Ferrara, Andrea
Fischer, Jacqueline R.
Franceschini, Alberto
Gallerani, Simona
Giard, Martin
González-Alfonso, Eduardo
Gruppioni, Carlotta
Guillard, Pierre
Hatziminaoglou, Evanthia
Imanishi, Masatoshi
Ishihara, Daisuke
Isobe, Naoki
Kaneda, Hidehiro
Kawada, M.
Kohno, K.
Kwon, J.
Madden, S.
Malkan, Matthew A.
Marassi, S.
Matsuhara, Hideo
Matsuura, M.
Miniutti, Giovanni
Nagamine, K.
Nagao, T.
Roelfsema, Peter R.
Sakon, I.
Santini, Paola
Schaerer, D.
Schneider, R.
Scott, Douglas J.
Serjeant, Stephen B.G.
Shibai, H.
Smith, John David T.
Sobacchi, E.
Sturm, Eckhard
Suzuki, Toyoaki
Vallini, L.
Van Der Tak, Floris F.S.
Vignali, Cristian
Yamada, T.
Wada, T.
Wang, Lingyu
Abstract
IR spectroscopy in the range 12–230 μm with the SPace IR telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics (SPICA) will reveal the physical processes governing the formation and evolution of galaxies and black holes through cosmic time, bridging the gap between the James Webb Space Telescope and the upcoming Extremely Large Telescopes at shorter wavelengths and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array at longer wavelengths. The SPICA, with its 2.5-m telescope actively cooled to below 8 K, will obtain the first spectroscopic determination, in the mid-IR rest-frame, of both the star-formation rate and black hole accretion rate histories of galaxies, reaching lookback times of 12 Gyr, for large statistically significant samples. Densities, temperatures, radiation fields, and gas-phase metallicities will be measured in dust-obscured galaxies and active galactic nuclei, sampling a large range in mass and luminosity, from faint local dwarf galaxies to luminous quasars in the distant Universe. Active galactic nuclei and starburst feedback and feeding mechanisms in distant galaxies will be uncovered through detailed measurements of molecular and atomic line profiles. The SPICA’s large-area deep spectrophotometric surveys will provide mid-IR spectra and continuum fluxes for unbiased samples of tens of thousands of galaxies, out to redshifts of z ∼ 6.
Part Of
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
Volume
34
Date Issued
2017-11-16
Open Access
No
DOI
10.1017/pasa.2017.48
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