The Via Project: Overview of the Science, Instrument, and Survey
Abstract
Via is a forthcoming all-sky spectroscopic survey that will achieve 100 m s-1 radial velocity stability for millions of faint (G 21) stars while reaching LSST's single-visit depth (r ≈ 24) for transient spectroscopy, opening new regimes in near-field cosmology and time-domain astrophysics. Via will deploy identical fiber-fed, multi-object spectrographs on the 6.5m MMT and Magellan/Clay telescopes for a five-year, dual-hemisphere survey of >2,000,000 stars beginning in 2027 - timed to complement LSST. Each instrument has 576 robotically positioned fibers over a 1 field of view, feeding two spectrographs: Viaspec (R ≈ 15,000; 505-595 nm; 540 fibers) and Boombox (R ≈ 1,000; 360-1010 nm; 36 fibers). Four key goals drive the survey: (1) a comprehensive survey of velocity perturbations in cold stellar streams, sensitive to M 107 subhalos below the threshold of galaxy formation, a stringent test of the particle nature of dark matter; (2) a chemodynamical census of Milky Way satellite galaxies to understand the formation of the faintest galaxies; (3) the first 3D tomographic maps of cold gas in the circumgalactic medium via NaI absorption; and (4) the rapid characterization of thousands of transients to the single-epoch survey depth of LSST. Ancillary science - including the Lyα forest at z ≈ 3-4, polluted white dwarfs, exoplanet host characterization, fast radio burst host galaxies, and extragalactic dwarf galaxies - will leverage spare fibers in every pointing. The Via Project is a collaboration between the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, Carnegie Observatories, Stanford University, and Yale University.
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