posted on 2017-06-07, 14:32authored byB. Gaensicke, P.-E. Tremblay, M. Barstow, G. Bono, Matthew Roger Burleigh, S. Casewell, V. Dhillon, J. Farihi, E. Garcia-Berro, S. Geier, N. Gentile-Fusillo, J. J. Hermes, M. Hollands, A. Istrate, S. Jordan, C. Knigge, C. Manser, T. Marsh, G. Nelemans, A. Pala, R. Raddi, T. Tauris, O. Toloza, D. Veras, K. Werner, D. Wilson
Gaia will identify several 1e5 white dwarfs, most of which will be in the solar neighborhood at distances of a few hundred parsecs. Ground-based optical follow-up spectroscopy of this sample of stellar remnants is essential to unlock the enormous scientific potential it holds for our understanding of stellar evolution, and the Galactic formation history of both stars and planets.
History
Citation
Multi-Object Spectroscopy in the Next Decade: Big Questions, Large Surveys, and Wide Fields, 2016, 507, pp. 159-164
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
Source
'Multi-Object Spectroscopy in the Next Decade' conference in La Palma, March 2015
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Multi-Object Spectroscopy in the Next Decade: Big Questions