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            "description": "A team of scientists has forecast the scientific impact of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope’s High Latitude Wide Area Survey on critical questions in cosmology. This observation program will consist of both imaging, which reveals the locations, shapes, sizes, and colors of objects like distant galaxies, and spectroscopy, which involves measuring the intensity of light from those objects at different wavelengths, across the same enormous swath of the universe. Scientists will be able to harness the power of a variety of cross-checking techniques using this rich data set, which promises an unprecedented look into some of cosmology’s most vexing problems.\r<br>\r<br>When it begins work in 2027, Roman will yield results that would be impossible to achieve using existing telescopes. Its impact will be further enhanced by teaming up with other new facilities like the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, a novel wide-field telescope now being built on the summit of Cerro Pachón in Chile. Scheduled to begin full operations by 2024, Rubin’s planned 10-year survey extends across Roman’s five-year primary mission.\r<br><br>The current observing strategy for Roman’s High Latitude Wide Area Survey will enable observations of about 5% of the sky – 2,000 square degrees – over the course of about a year. However, the team illustrated how changing the survey’s design could yield compelling results. The survey could be extended, for example, to cover more of the same area that Rubin will observe. Or it could observe galaxies using a single broad filter, instead of imaging with four separate ones, allowing faster observations while still retaining the survey’s depth.",
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            "description": "See [www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2021/nasa-s-roman-mission-will-help-empower-a-new-era-of-cosmological-discovery](www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2021/nasa-s-roman-mission-will-help-empower-a-new-era-of-cosmological-discovery)",
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            "title": "High Latitude Time-Domain Survey Tiling Pattern",
            "description": "This animation shows a possible layout of NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope’s High Latitude Time-Domain Survey tiling pattern. The observing program will be designed by a community process, but it is expected to cover five square degrees – a region of the sky as large as 25 full moons – and pierce far into space, back to when the universe was about 500 million years old, less than 4 percent of its current age of 13.8 billion years. || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final_print.jpg (1024x576) [70.7 KB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final.jpg (3840x2160) [1.1 MB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final_searchweb.png (320x180) [36.1 KB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final_thm.png (80x40) [3.0 KB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_1080.mp4 (1920x1080) [30.2 MB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_1080.webm (1920x1080) [3.8 MB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_4k_compressed.mp4 (3840x2160) [19.6 MB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_4k.mp4 (3840x2160) [74.9 MB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final.jpg.dzi (3840x2160) [178 bytes] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_Final.jpg_files (1x1) [4.0 KB] || Roman_HLTDS_Tiling_ProRes_3840x2160_5994.mov (3840x2160) [3.0 GB] || ",
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            "title": "Dominic Benford 2022 AAS Roman Hyperwall Talk",
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