Destiny is a simple, direct, low cost mission to determine the properties of
dark energy by obtaining a cosmologically deep supernova (SN) type Ia Hubble
diagram. Operated at L2, its science instrument is a 1.65m space telescope,
featuring a grism-fed near-infrared (NIR) (0.85-1.7micron) survey
camera/spectrometer with a 0.12 square degree field of view. During its
two-year primary mission, Destiny will detect, observe, and characterize ~3000
SN Ia events over the redshift interval 0.4<z<1.7 within a 3 square degree
survey area. In conjunction with ongoing ground-based SN Ia surveys for z<0.8,
Destiny mission data will be used to construct a high-precision Hubble diagram
and thereby constrain the dark energy equation of state from a time when it was
strongly matter-dominated to the present when dark energy dominates. The
grism-images simultaneously provide broad-band photometry, redshifts, and SN
classification, as well as time-resolved diagnostic data for investigating
additional SN luminosity diagnostics. Destiny will be used in its third year as
a high resolution, wide-field imager to conduct a multicolor NIR weak lensing
(WL) survey covering 1000 square degrees. The large-scale mass power spectrum
derived from weak lensing distortions of field galaxies as a function of
redshift will provide independent and complementary constraints on the dark
energy equation of state. The combination of SN and WL is much more powerful
than either technique on its own. Used together, these surveys will have more
than an order of magnitude greater sensitivity than will be provided by ongoing
ground-based projects. The dark energy parameters, w_0 and w_a, will be
measured to a precision of 0.05 and 0.2 respectively.Comment: Contains full color figure