Microarcsecond Astrometry: Science Highlights from Gaia [IMA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.11712


Access to microarcsecond astrometry is now routine in the radio, infrared, and optical domains. In particular the publication of the second data release from the Gaia mission made it possible for every astronomer to work with easily accessible, high-precision astrometry for 1.7 billion sources to 21st magnitude over the full sky.
* Gaia provides splendid astrometry but at the limits of the data small systematic errors are present. A good understanding of the Hipparcos/Gaia astrometry concept, and of the data collection and processing, provides insights into the origins of the systematic errors and how to mitigate their effects.
* A selected set of results from Gaia highlight the breadth of exciting science and unexpected results, from the solar system to the distant universe, to creative uses of the data.
* Gaia DR2 provides for the first time a dense sampling of Galactic phase space with high precision astrometry, photometry, and radial velocities, allowing to uncover subtle features in phase space and the observational HR diagram.
* In the coming decade, we can look forward to more accurate and richer Gaia data releases, and new photometric and spectroscopic surveys coming online that will provide essential complementary data.
* The longer term promises exciting new opportunities for microarcsecond astrometry and beyond, including the plans for an infrared version of Gaia which would offer the dense sampling of phase space deep into the Milky Way’s nuclear regions.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Brown
Wed, 24 Feb 21
35/64

Comments: 61 pages, 10 figures, author’s version (before copy-editing) of invited review to appear in Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics (2021)