Jeremy Tinker and Zheng Zheng
January 19, 2021
DESI member and noted rapper David Weinberg, from Ohio State University, was awarded the Dannie Heineman Prize for Astrophysics. He shares the award with Robert Lupton of Princeton University. The award celebrates the massive contributions both researchers have made to ushering in the era of large-scale three-dimensional mapping of the universe through the spatial distribution of the galaxies within it, primarily through their work with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS).
As a project, DESI owes a debt of gratitude to SDSS. SDSS was the first truly large-scale galaxy redshift survey, using a CCD camera and fiber-fed spectrographs. With first light in 2000, its goal— realized in 2007 with the completion of SDSS-II— was to map nearly a quarter of sky by obtaining distances (redshifts) of the million brightest galaxies and quasars in the universe. In late 1980s, when the SDSS was merely an idea being batted around the Paris Conference Room of the Chicago O’Hare Hilton, David was a graduate student at Princeton, working with SDSS’s visionary founder Jim Gunn. He both literally and figuratively got started on the ground floor of large-scale spectroscopic surveys.
David became a full SDSS member in 1992, and went on to serve as the Scientific Spokesperson for SDSS-II, a position that demands a myriad of critical tasks related to the design, organization, promotion, and execution of the project. When the SDSS-III collaboration was created in 2008, David was chosen to be the Project Scientist. In recent years David has brought his expertise to the DESI collaboration, being one of the chief architects of the Bright Galaxy Survey component of the project as well as serving as the inaugural BGS working group co-chair.
While a member of SDSS, David made invaluable contributions to survey design, galaxy target selection, and eventual analysis of the maps of cosmic structure. David was an early adopter and developer of the halo occupation model to describe the distribution of galaxies in space, who introduced the now commonly used term Halo Occupation Distribution (HOD). The model relates galaxies to clumps (halos) in the matter distribution in the universe. The SDSS data led to the pioneering application of the HOD framework to interpret the clustering of galaxies in space, with clustering trend naturally explained and galaxy-halo connection informatively inferred. The HOD model has ever since been widely adopted to analyze galaxy clustering data, becoming a powerful tool in learning about galaxy formation and cosmology and in creating simulated galaxy catalogs for various purposes in large galaxy surveys.
In addition to mapping the universe with galaxies, David was also a pioneer in a novel method of determining the matter distribution of the universe: the Lyman-alpha forest. This method uses bright quasars as cosmological flashlights. Cool gas along the pathway to our telescopes absorbs some of the quasars’ light, leaving wiggles (Lyman-alpha forest) in the quasar spectra. Such wiggles reveal the spatial distribution of cool gas, which tracks dark matter. Thus, the spectra of quasars taken in SDSS and in DESI provide complementary maps of cosmic structure.
As a scientist, David wears many hats in addition to survey astronomy. He has produced highly influential work on hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation, he has worked on the life cycles of active galactic nuclei, and more recently he has used SDSS’s spectra of stars to perform “chemical cartography” within our own Milky Way Galaxy. His 169-page review article on “Observational Probes of Cosmic Acceleration”, with nearly 900 citations, has become the standard reference in guiding our observational efforts toward revealing the nature of cosmic acceleration.
In addition to his research-oriented scientific pursuits, David has a long-standing collaboration with the MacArthur Award winning sculptor Josiah McElheny. Together, they have created cosmologically-inspired glass sculptures that have been exhibited all over the world. David’s role is in making the designs representative of the physics of the universe. For example, the piece An End to Modernity depicts the history of the universe from the Big Bang to the present day, emphasizing the evolution of cosmic structure and the epoch of galaxy formation.
Since starting at Ohio State in 1995, David has been advisor and mentor to 17 graduate students. Many of his former students, including the two of us, are themselves members of SDSS and DESI, and are using these data to mentor and train their own students, drawing on the lessons learned while working with David. Needless to say, David’s profound influence on cosmological redshift surveys will be felt for many academic generations. Congratulations to David for this well-deserved recognition of his continuing impact on astronomy, cosmology, and its presentation to the public.