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The ESO Diffuse Interstellar Bands Large Exploration Survey (EDIBLES): I. Project description, survey sample, and quality assessment

  • Nick L.J. Cox
  • , Jan Cami
  • , Amin Farhang
  • , Jonathan Smoker
  • , Ana Monreal-Ibero
  • , Rosine Lallement
  • , Peter J. Sarre
  • , Charlotte C.M. Marshall
  • , Keith T. Smith
  • , Christopher J. Evans
  • , Pierre Royer
  • , Harold Linnartz
  • , Martin A. Cordiner
  • , Christine Joblin
  • , Jacco Th Van Loon
  • , Bernard H. Foing
  • , Neil H. Bhatt
  • , Emeric Bron
  • , Meriem Elyajouri
  • , Alex De Koter
  • Pascale Ehrenfreund, Atefeh Javadi, Lex Kaper, Habib G. Khosroshadi, Mike Laverick, Franck Le Petit, Giacomo Mulas, Evelyne Roueff, Farid Salama, Marco Spaans
  • Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie (IRAP)
  • Western University
  • SETI Institute
  • Institute for Research for Fundamental Sciences
  • European Southern Observatory
  • Observatoire de Paris
  • Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
  • University of La Laguna
  • University of Nottingham
  • Royal Astronomical Society
  • AAAS Science International
  • Royal Observatory
  • KU Leuven
  • Leiden University
  • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • Catholic University of America
  • Keele University
  • European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC)
  • ICCM
  • University of Amsterdam
  • George Washington University
  • National Institute for Astrophysics
  • NASA Ames Research Center
  • University of Groningen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

60 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The carriers of the diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) are largely unidentified molecules ubiquitously present in the interstellar medium (ISM). After decades of study, two strong and possibly three weak near-infrared DIBs have recently been attributed to the C\hbox{$-{60}^+$} fullerene based on observational and laboratory measurements. There is great promise for the identification of the over 400 other known DIBs, as this result could provide chemical hints towards other possible carriers. In an effort tosystematically study the properties of the DIB carriers, we have initiated a new large-scale observational survey: the ESO Diffuse Interstellar Bands Large Exploration Survey (EDIBLES). The main objective is to build on and extend existing DIB surveys to make a major step forward in characterising the physical and chemical conditions for a statistically significant sample of interstellar lines-of-sight, with the goal to reverse-engineer key molecular properties of the DIB carriers. EDIBLES is a filler Large Programme using the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph at the Very Large Telescope at Paranal, Chile. It is designed to provide an observationally unbiased view of the presence and behaviour of the DIBs towards early-spectral-type stars whose lines-of-sight probe the diffuse-to-translucent ISM. Such a complete dataset will provide a deep census of the atomic and molecular content, physical conditions, chemical abundances and elemental depletion levels for each sightline. Achieving these goals requires a homogeneous set of high-quality data in terms of resolution (R ~ 70 000-100 000), sensitivity (S/N up to 1000 per resolution element), and spectral coverage (305-1042 nm), as well as a large sample size (100+ sightlines). In this first paper the goals, objectives and methodology of the EDIBLES programme are described and an initial assessment of the data is provided.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA76
JournalAstronomy and Astrophysics
Volume606
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Dust, extinction
  • ISM: clouds
  • ISM: lines and bands
  • ISM: molecules
  • Local insterstellar matter
  • Stars: early-type

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