Susanna Widicus Weaver, Joel Bowman, Michael Duncan, Darek Lis, John Pearson, Steven Shipman, Phillip Stancil, Al Wootten
A group of 72 members of the astrochemistry and spectroscopy communities assembled at Emory University in October, 2012, to discuss the state-of-the art in molecular laboratory spectroscopic techniques used to study molecules of astrophysical interest, and highlight recent successes in laboratory efforts that complement new astronomical observations. The format of the meeting facilitated detailed discussion of the needs for collecting and interpreting molecular spectroscopic information to support observational astrophysics in the era of Far-IR astronomy. We present the findings and recommendations from this workshop in this report. The participants in this workshop identified the development of new laboratory capabilities that offer rapid, broadband, high-resolution, high-sensitivity measurements of molecular spectra in the frequency ranges that overlap with new observational facilities as the top priority for far-infrared laboratory astrophysics initiatives over the next 5-10 years. An additional major need is the development of suitable analysis tools for broadband molecular spectra from both the laboratory and space; though such efforts should be conducted within the framework of larger collaborative funding structures, rather than through single-PI efforts, so as to provide tools that are generally applicable rather than highly specialized. Additional efforts in theory, computation, and modeling that support these goals are also important for advancing this field.
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http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.4263
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