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The La Silla Schmidt Southern Survey

  • Adam A. Millerj, ak(Author)
    ,
  • Natasha S. Abramsv(Author)
    ,
  • Greg Alderingz(Author)
    ,
  • Shreya Anandv, al(Author)
    ,
  • Charlotte R. Angusf(Author)
    ,
  • Iair Arcavik(Author)
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Original language

English

Article number

094204

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (Volume 137, Issue 9)

Publication milestones

  • Published - 01/09/2025

Publication status

Published - 01/09/2025

ISSN

0004-6280

External Publication IDs

  • Scopus: 105017453190

Abstract

We present the La Silla Schmidt Southern Survey (LS4), a new wide-field, time-domain survey to be conducted with the 1 m ESO Schmidt telescope. The 268 megapixel LS4 camera mosaics 32 2k×4k fully depleted CCDs, providing a ∼20 deg2 field of view with 1 pixel−1 resolution. The LS4 camera will have excellent performance at longer wavelengths: in a standard 45 s exposure the expected 5σ limiting magnitudes in g, i, z are ∼21.5, ∼20.9, and ∼20.3 mag (AB), respectively. The telescope design requires a novel filter holder that fixes different bandpasses over each quadrant of the detector. Two quadrants will have i band, while the other two will be g and z band with color information obtained by dithering targets across the different quadrants. The majority (90%) of the observing time will be used to conduct a public survey that monitors the extragalactic sky at both moderate (3 days) and high (1 day) cadence, as well as focused observations within the Galactic plane and bulge. Alerts from the public survey will be broadcast to the community via established alert brokers. LS4 will run concurrently with the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). The combination of LS4+LSST will enable detailed holistic monitoring of many nearby transients: high-cadence LS4 observations will resolve the initial rise and peak of the light curve while less-frequent but deeper observations by LSST will characterize the years before and after explosion. Here, we summarize the primary science objectives of LS4 including microlensing events in the Galaxy, extragalactic transients powered by massive black holes or stellar explosions, the search for electromagnetic counterparts to multi-messenger events, and supernova cosmology.