Calendar

Nov
21
lun
Séminaire Delphine Perrodin @ Salle Atmosphère
Nov 21 @ 10 h 30 min
Séminaire

To do

Nov
24
jeu
Séminaire Antoine Gusdorf @ Salle Univers
Nov 24 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire

TBD

Déc
14
mer
Arbre de Noël @ Salle Univers
Déc 14 @ 14 h 30 min – 16 h 00 min
divers

Au programme :

Accueil des enfants
Maquillage
Magie
Contes
Arrivée du Père Noël
Cadeaux & bonbons
Gouter

Jan
4
mer
Séminaire Philippe Paillou sur le Saharasar @ Salle Atmosphère
Jan 4 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire
Jan
11
mer
Séminaire Arnaud Pierens
Jan 11 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire
Jan
18
mer
The Quest for the Gravitational-Wave Stochastic Background, Tania Regimbau (OCA) @ Salle Univers
Jan 18 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire
Jan
23
lun
Séminaire de Chiara Ferrari @ Salle Univers
Jan 23 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire
Fév
1
mer
Denis Burgarella (LAM) @ Salle Univers
Fév 1 @ 11 h 00 min
Séminaire
JWST, WFIRST and FLARE predicted number counts at 10 < z < 15: the case for a Wide-Field N+MIR Space Telescope & the FLARE ESA M5 project, Denis Burgarella (LAM)
We can read in the science case presented for several next generation telescope projects, sentences like « The First Light theme science goal is to find and understand these predicted first light objects ». This one was extracted from https://jwst.stsci.edu/science-planning/science-corner/the-end-of-the-dark-ages-first-l Using what we presently know about galaxies in the very high redshift universe to z ~ 10, we can start to predict what we can expect in the redshift range 10 < z < 15 and these first-light objects. In this talk, I will try to present the present status of these predictions from several recent papers. As one might expect, the density of these extreme redshift galaxies and their spectral characteristics make them difficult to detect. I will derive some constraints about what the characteristics of a telescope should be to detect a reasonable sample of galaxies at z > 10 to z ~ 15. In addition to the extreme universe study, FLARE will build a 5000 deg2 imaging survey and 40 deg2 spectrocopic survey of the Milky Way in the N/M-IR at sub-arcsec resolution. In conclusion, we propose a technically simple and realistic project with clear and unique objectives related to the extreme universe and to the local universe communities (applications for the Solar system also exist). No other project in operation or planned is able to address these questions in the same statistical way.