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NAIC/AO Newsletter, November 1997

First Call for Observing Proposals using the Arecibo Gregorian System


Paul Goldsmith


The Arecibo Upgrade Project has now entered its commissioning phase, and consequently NAIC is making a call for observing proposals which can make use of the systems that are currently in the best operational state. Such proposals should be submitted by December 15, 1997. This is a call for proposals to use the telescope during its commissioning period. It is anticipated there will be another call for proposals with a February 1 deadline for observing in the June 1 1998 to September 30, 1998 period. Prospective proposers can find full details of the Arecibo Observatory, NAIC's policies, the telescope and its upgrade, and associated observing equipment at http://www.naic.edu (1).

The system parameters that are relevant for the present proposal call are:

Pointing range: all azimuths, 0 - 19.7 degrees zenith angle

Frequency range: 425 - 435 MHz, 1.36 - 1.7 Ghz

Point-source sensitivity: greater than 8 K/Jy.

The dual-polarization 430 MHz and L-band systems are expected to have system temperatures of 50 K and below 30 K at the zenith, respectively (2). Presently, or soon to be available public-access backends include:

i) the AOFTM and PSPM pulsar machines (3),

ii) a very flexible 16,000-channel spectral-line autocorrelator with up to 200-MHZ total bandwidth (4), and

iii) continuum detectors.

The new S-band planetary radar transmitter is working and will be available with a receiving system that may initially have a system temperature of about 50K.

Proposals can be for any area of astronomical research that can be carried out profitably with available equipment. Following an initial period during which the Arecibo staff will make an intensive series of commissioning tests, optimizations, and calibrations of the instrument, outside users will be allocated a percentage of the available time, with this percentage ramping up until full user operations are restored and the telescope is considered fully commissioned. The telescope pointing and calibration, equipment performance, monitor and control software, etc., should be at a reasonable level of performance, and adequately documented, by the time that the first telescope users commence their observations. However, the Gregorian system incorporates new feeds, receivers, drives, data-taking systems, and computer hardware and software. Thus, observing time assigned during the commissioning phase will perforce carry a higher risk of disappointment than will subsequently be the case, and the Observatory does not guarantee its traditional high level of observer satisfaction. In addition, the RFI environment is not yet well characterized, although it is known to be highly time variable and may present problems for observations outside of protected radio-astronomy bands.

Bearing the above in mind, we encourage proposers to focus on scientific projects that are relatively straightforward to carry out and do not require excessive amounts of telescope time. Outside users scheduled during these first months are expected to share the expertise they gain with the staff, and especially to furnish written reports of any experiences or calibrations that will be of use to the staff in preparing for normal operations.

This announcement is being made before we can determine exactly when user observations will recommence, how much time will be available for these projects, or the time scale on which the user component will ramp up. Presently, we expect the first outside users to be on the telescope early in 1998. All proposals received will be refereed, and a subset of the highest-ranked ones that are well matched to the available instrumentation, scheduled during the commissioning phase. Refereed proposals will be considered for the first regularly scheduled trimester of user operations as well as for scheduling during the commissioning period. Information on the latest progress towards full operational status will be posted regularly on the NAIC web site (1). We encourage proposers to take advantage of the electronic submission procedure described in the NAIC web page (5).

We note that NAIC has a large backlog of refereed radio astronomy proposals for the 430 MHZ line-feed system which compete directly with proposals for the Gregorian.

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WWW Notes:


(1) On arrival at http://www.naic.edu, select the Website map (magnifying-glass icon on the right-hand side of the home page) which will show the full range of available information available on the site. For information on telescope performance, the Upgrade, receivers, the IF/LO system, back-ends, etc., select the Telescope hyperlink under "Telescope Information".

(2) http://www.naic.edu/techinfo/teltech/rec.htm

(3) http://www.naic.edu/~kiriaki/instrument.html

(4) http://www.naic.edu/techinfo/teltech/upgrade/correlat.htm

(5) http://www.naic.edu/vscience/proposal/proposal.htm

WWW Notes:

NAIC/AO Newsletter, November 97
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