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Survey Observing Strategy

Main Survey coadded 5-sigma depth according to the Baseline2018a OpSim run

Visit the new survey strategy documentation!

As of April 2024, find the new survey strategy documentation at survey-strategy.lsst.io.

Questions? Everyone is welcome to ask about survey cadence in the "Science - Survey Strategy" category of the Rubin Community Forum.

Current LSST Survey Optimization Efforts

As of 2020, the Survey Cadence Optimization Committee (SCOC) was charged to make specific recommendations for the cadence choices for the full 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), based on input from the science community. Read more about the SCOC, the 2020 Cadence Notes, and the timeline for decisions about LSST survey strategy here. Learn more about how to participate in the analysis of Operations Simulations (OpSim) with the Metric Analysis Framework in the Survey Strategy category of the Rubin Community Forum.

Past LSST Survey Optimization Efforts

Read the 2017 community white paper, Science Driven Optimization of the LSST Observing Strategy, or view the document's GitHub repository.

The LSST Baseline Survey Strategy

Synthesizing the requirements to accomplish the four primary science objectives of Rubin Observatory,

  • Probing dark energy and dark matter
  • Taking an inventory of the Solar System
  • Exploring the transient optical sky
  • Mapping the Milky Way

results in the following constraints for the LSST Survey Strategy:

  • Cosmological parameter estimation by many techniques requires uniform coverage of 18,000 square degrees of sky. Obtaining accurate photometric redshifts in every field requires a specified number of visits in each filter.
  • Weak lensing shear measurements benefit from allocating times of best seeing to observations in the r and i bands. Maximizing signal-to-noise ratios requires choosing the next filter based upon the current sky background.
  •  Supernova cosmology requires frequent, deep photometry in all bands, with z and y observations even during dark time.
  • Detecting the motion of solar system objects and transients, characterizing variability on various timescales, and acquiring the best proper motions and parallaxes place further demands upon the distribution of revisit intervals and observation geometries to each point on the sky.

The "Baseline Survey Strategy" refers to a fiducial survey strategy which will meet the constraints imposed by the four primary science objectives. This strategy takes into account the fact that making uniform progress in time toward each of the scientific goals facilitates analyses made while the survey is still in progress. 

Using the current baseline cadence, LSST ten-year survey will take more than five million exposures, collecting over 50 petabytes of raw image data to produce a deep, time-dependent, movie of about 20,000 square degrees of sky. The sequence, or "cadence" with which these exposures are made is essential to achieving multiple scientific goals from a single survey, an important feature of the Rubin Observatory LSST concept. The current default plan implemented in the baseline survey assumes that LSST will acquire images as pairs of back-to-back, 15-second exposures to aid in cosmic-ray rejection. This pair is called a visit - a single observation of ~ten-square-degrees of sky through a given filter. Designing the LSST survey requires ordering these visits in time and allocating them among its six filters so as to maximize the return on scientific goals in the decade-long survey. 

In addition to Rubin Observatory's 18,000 deg2 main survey via its “universal cadence”, up to approximately 10% of Rubin observing time will be dedicated to other programs, including intensive observation of a set of Deep Drilling Fields. Deeper coverage and more frequent temporal sampling (in at least some of the LSST Camera's ugrizy filters) will be obtained for the Deep Drilling Fields than for typical points on the sky. The full Deep Drilling Field (DDF) program will address a broad range of science topics, including Solar System, Galactic, and extragalactic studies. 

Further Background Information

Science Book - Chapter 1: Introduction - An overview of the Rubin Observatory Project including its history, science goals, and system design.

Science Book - Chapter 2: LSST System Design -  A description of the basic elements of the Rubin Observatory system design, with particular emphasis on elements impacting the science objectives.

Science Book - Chapter 3: LSST System Performance - A description of the essential characteristics of Rubin Observatory system performance.

 
Image Credit: 
The LSST Operations Simulation Team, 2018.

Financial support for Rubin Observatory comes from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through Cooperative Agreement No. 1258333, the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science under Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515, and private funding raised by the LSST Corporation. The NSF-funded Rubin Observatory Project Office for construction was established as an operating center under management of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA).  The DOE-funded effort to build the Rubin Observatory LSST Camera (LSSTCam) is managed by the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC).
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950 to promote the progress of science. NSF supports basic research and people to create knowledge that transforms the future.
NSF and DOE will continue to support Rubin Observatory in its Operations phase. They will also provide support for scientific research with LSST data.   




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