Introducing 4MOST: The next generation survey telescope

4MOST will study thousands of spectra at once in the southern hemisphere and aims to be operational in 2022

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4MOST is a wide-field spectroscopic survey facility under development for the four-metre-class Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) at Paranal in Chile. Image credit: G. Hüdepohl (atacamaphoto.com)/ESO

The four-metre (13-foot) Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope 4MOST will be the largest spectroscopic survey facility of its kind in the southern hemisphere and address today’s most pressing astronomical questions in the fields of galactic archaeology, high-energy astrophysics, galaxy evolution and cosmology. With the publication of 13 papers, the consortium introduces 4MOST to the scientific community.

In a special issue of the ESO Messenger, several articles give a project overview and provide astronomers with detailed information about the first call for proposals, the Scientific Operations and the Survey Strategy Plan. “Also, each of the planned surveys are described, thus preparing the ESO community for the Call for Letters of Intent to use the facility, which will be released in the second half of 2019”, says Roelof de Jong, Principal Investigator of 4MOST. “This will be a singular opportunity for the astronomical community to apply to use the facility during its first five years of observation.”

4MOST is a new wide-field spectroscopic survey facility under development for the four-metre-class Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) at Paranal in Chile. It is on one of the best observatory sites in the world and provides access to unique objects in the southern hemisphere, most notably the Galactic Centre and the Magellanic Clouds. The 4MOST design allows tens of millions of spectra to be obtained via five-year surveys, even for targets distributed over a significant fraction of the sky.

The new instrument will provide VISTA with the ability to perform large spectroscopic surveys, capturing the spectra of 2400 objects simultaneously, over an area on the sky equivalent to 20 full Moons. Image credit: 4MOST Consortium

The instrument is under construction at a number of consortium institutes, coordinated by the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP), Germany. On the operations side, the proposal selection process starts while the manufacturing will continue into 2021. Once the subsystems are finished at the different institutes, they will all be transported to Potsdam and extensively tested as a full system. In 2022, they will be shipped to Chile and installed on the VISTA telescope.

The 4MOST operations scheme differs from other ESO instrument operations in that it allows many different science cases to be scheduled simultaneously during one observation. The science programme itself is organised into surveys centred on stellar objects to perform galactic archaeology of different components of the Milky Way and the Magellanic Clouds, on extragalactic objects aiming to characterise cosmological parameters, the nature of dark energy and dark matter, and the formation history of galaxies and black holes. All surveys on 4MOST will be public surveys, which means that the raw data and higher-level survey products will be published in the ESO archive.

The 4MOST consortium consists of 15 institutes in Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Sweden, Switzerland, Australia, and the Netherlands, under leadership of the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP). More than 330 scientists and engineers are working on 4MOST and contributed to the now published articles.

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