With approval from the National Science
Board, the National Science Foundation (NSF) Director will advance the Large
Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) to the final design stage. This action permits
the NSF Director to include funds for LSST construction in a future budget
request. To be located in Chile, the LSST is a proposed 8-meter wide-field
survey telescope that will survey the entire sky approximately twice per week,
delivering a large and comprehensive data set that will transform astronomical
research.
The LSST was the first-ranked
ground-based large initiative in the 2010 National Academy of Sciences decadal
survey in astronomy and astrophysics. The project is a partnership among the
NSF, the Department of Energy (DOE) and a number of private contributors.
"LSST will provide an unprecedented
view of the sky while leading the emerging discipline of data-enabled
science," said NSF Director Subra Suresh. "The project will foster
international collaboration and offer unique methods for discovery in this new
age of Big Data."
Equipped with a 3-billion pixel digital
camera, the LSST will propel astronomy ever further into the era of
data-enabled science. By charting objects that change or move, and tracing
billions of remote galaxies, LSST will provide multiple probes of the
mysterious dark matter and dark energy, provide insight into short-lived
transient events such as astronomical explosions or collisions, and create a
more detailed map of the Milky Way and our own solar system.
"LSST will transform how scientists
detect and analyze astronomical events," said Edward Seidel, assistant
director for the NSF's Mathematical and Physical Sciences Directorate.
"The potential to deepen our understanding of the universe and its
constituents, from distant exploding stars to nearby asteroids, is
enormous."
NSF and DOE have recently signed a
formal Memorandum of Understanding delineating the scope of the agencies'
responsibilities throughout the lifetime of the project. NSF will be
responsible for development of the site and telescope, as well as the extensive
data management system. DOE, through a collaboration led by its SLAC National
Accelerator Laboratory, will be responsible for development and delivery of the
large-format camera. The Republic of Chile, through an agreement with
Universidad de Chile, will make available the observing site for the LSST
telescope.
The total construction cost of LSST is
estimated to be about $665M, approximately 70 percent from NSF, 24 percent from
DOE, and 6 percent from private donors to the project. The construction is
anticipated to last five years, followed by a two-year commissioning period
before the start of the survey.
-NSF-
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