COSMOS-Web

COSMOS-Web (PID: 1727) is a 255 hour wide-field Cycle 1 JWST treasury program that maps a contiguous 0.6 deg2 area with deep NIRCam imaging in 4 filters (F115W, F150W, F277W, and F444W) and a non-contiguous 0.2 deg2 area with MIRI in parallel. COSMOS-Web builds on the rich heritage of multiwavelength observations and data products available in the COSMOS field, and will contain about a million galaxies across cosmic time. For more information, see survey Overview Paper or contact the survey PIs: Jeyhan Kartaltepe (jeyhan [at] astro [dot] rit [dot] edu) and Caitlin Casey (cmcasey [at] utexas [dot] edu).

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COSMOS-Web Primary Science Goals


The design of COSMOS-Web is motivated by three primary science goals:

1. Map Cosmic Reionization

COSMOS-Web will revolutionize our understanding of reionization's spatial distribution, environments, and drivers at early stages by detecting thousands of galaxies in the epoch of reionization (6<z<11) on scales large enough to mitigate cosmic variance.
 
Constraining the physics of reionization requires identifying and characterizing the galaxies that are embedded deep within the predominantly neutral Universe at z > 8. COSMOS-Web will grow the census of Epoch of Reionization (EoR, 6<z<11) galaxies beyond what is currently known pre-JWST by a factor of ~5 and quantify the evolution of the UV luminosity function (UVLF), stellar mass function (SMF), and star formation histories of galaxies across a wide redshift range. The large survey area will capture reionization on scales larger than its expected patchiness, eliminating the effect of cosmic variance, and forge the detection of hundreds of intrinsically bright galaxies at 8<z<11 embedded in the neutral IGM, which likely trace the highest-density peaks from which the reionization process was likely to begin.
 

2. Trace Massive Galaxy Evolution

COSMOS-Web will enable the identification and characterization of massive galaxies in the first two billion years, including the rarest quiescent galaxies at z > 4, and allow us to constrain the formation and evolution of early massive galaxies. 
 
The growing census of quiescent galaxies at early epochs (M* > 1010 M out to z ~ 3–4) has presented a strong challenge to theoretical models. In order to build up their significant stellar masses and quench their star formation so early in the Universe’s history, these galaxies must have formed their stars at incredible rates (≫100 M yr−1 at very early times) and then abruptly shut down the production of stars well within the Universe’s first billion years. The quiescent galaxy luminosity function beyond z ~ 4 is unconstrained, though such galaxies are expected to be very rare and particularly difficult to separate from dusty star forming galaxies that can mimic the same red colors. COSMOS-Web will allow us to take the first census of massive galaxies from EoR to the peak of galaxy assembly, study the evolution of their morphologies and sizes, and distinguish between massive star-forming galaxies and the first massive quiescent systems. 
 

3. Link Dark Matter to Visible Matter

We will be able to directly measure the evolution of the stellar mass to halo mass relation (SMHR) out to z ~ 2.5 and its variance with galaxies' star formation histories and morphologies. 
 
The link between galaxies’ dark matter halos and their baryonic content (visible matter) is of fundamental importance to cosmology. It is thought that galaxies’ halo mass growth should be independent of their baryonic processes (such as star formation and quenching) and if measurable, could provide a direct path to constraining galaxy growth and quenching mechanisms. Obtaining direct measurements of halo masses not only helps us to constrain the astrophysics of galaxies but also provides independent measurements of cosmological parameters. Weak gravitational lensing is the only tool that can be used as a direct probe of halo masses for a large sample of galaxies across cosmic time. COSMOS-Web will enable these weak lensing measurements, allowing us to directly measure galaxies’ halo masses (and therefore, constrain the SMHR) out to z ~ 2.5 down to M* > few ×109 M with weak lensing (down to 108 Mat z ~ 1).
 
Beyond these primary science driver’s, COSMOS-Web’s legacy value will extend to many subfields of extragalactic astronomy and beyond. We anticipate that COSMOS-Web will have potential impact on the detailed study of galaxy morphologies, using spatially resolved SEDs to measure galaxy properties, placing constraints on the dust attenuation law, identifying and characterizing galaxy protoclusters, finding strong gravitational lenses, identifying direct collapse black hole candidates, studying the co-evolution of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies, searching for z > 10 pair instability supernovae, and identifying ultracool sub-dwarf stars in the Milky Way’s halo.

 

Observing Strategy

The COSMOS-Web mosaic consists of 152 visits over 255 hours and will be taken over three epochs. The first epoch of data consists of six visits covering ∼77 arcmin2 with NIRCam and was observed on 5-6 January 2023. Currently, 77 pointings are scheduled for April/May 2023 (roughly half the field), and the remaining 69 pointings in December 2023/January 2024. 
 
 
COSMOS-Web NIRCam depths in each filter

NIRCam
Exposures

[#]

Exposure
Time

[s]

Short
Wavelength
Area

[arcmin2]

F115W
Depth

[5 σ]

F150W
Depth

[5 σ]

Long 
Wavelength
Area

[arcmin2]

F277W
Depth

[5 σ]

F444W
Depth

[5 σ]

1 257.68 71.3 26.87 27.14 17.8 27.71 27.61
2 515.36 991.6 27.13 27.35 978.0 27.99 27.83
3 773.05 60.0 27.26 27.50 24.4 28.12 27.94
4 1030.73 805.2 27.45 27.66 904.3 28.28 28.17

 

 
 
COSMOS-Web will obtain mid-infrared imaging using the MIRI instrument in parallel in one filter, F770W. The depth in this filter varies by the number of MIRI exposures at a given position (ranging 2-8 exposures).
 
COSMOS-Web MIRI F770W Depths

MIRI
Exposures

[#]

Exposure
Time

[s]

Area
Covered

[arcmin2]

F770W Depth
[5 σ]

2 527.26 80.5 25.33
4 1054.52 430.4 25.70
6 1581.77 30.8 25.76
8 2109.03 146.1 25.98

 

Community Downloads

Note that the Cycle 1 program, PRIMER (PID: 1837) observes the COSMOS-CANDELS region and is therefore embedded within COSMOS-Web.

 

Plans for Data Product Release

 

COSMOS-Web is being observed in three epochs (Epoch 1: Jan 5/6, 2023; Epoch 2: April/May 2023; Epoch 3: December 2023 / January 2024). Our tream is committed to the public release of initial mosaics 6 months after each epoch and catalogs after roughly one year.
 

Our first data was taken in January - see below for links to jpg images of these first data!
 

NIRCam: Full resolution image with and without logo

MIRI: Full resolution image with and without logo

 

 

Press Releases

  1. First images released from James Webb Space Telescope’s largest general observer program
  2. COSMOS-Web selected as JWST’s largest Cycle 1 program

 

Publications

  1. COSMOS-Web: An Overview of the JWST Cosmic Origins Survey, Casey, Kartaltepe et al. 2023, ApJ, in press [paper summary]
  2. Resolving Galactic-scale Obscuration of X-Ray AGNs at z ≳ 1 with COSMOS-Web, Silverman et al. 2023, ApJL, 951, 41
  3. A Near-Infrared Faint, Far-Infrared-Luminous Dusty Galaxy at z~5 in COSMOS-Web, McKinney et al. 2023, ApJ, in press
  4. Two massive, compact, and dust-obscured candidate z~8 galaxies discovered by JWST, Akins et al. 2023, ApJL, in press
  5. Unveiling the distant Universe: Characterizing z≥9 Galaxies in the first epoch of COSMOS-Web, Franco et al. 2023, ApJ, submitted