[ASA] Australian Call for LCO Proposals - 2023B
Christopher Onken
christopher.onken at anu.edu.au
Tue May 16 13:26:54 AEST 2023
As a host institution for the Las Cumbres Observatory (LCO) global network of telescopes, ANU is entitled to a share of the network's observing time, which it is making available to all Australian astronomers. The closing date for observing proposals for the 2023B semester (from 1 August 2023 to 31 January 2024) will be 12noon AEDT, Thursday, 15 June 2023.
From the 2023B semester, there is no limitation on the fraction of time allocated to proposals led by Australians outside of ANU. However, under the ongoing ANU host agreement with LCO, at least half of the overall Australian time will consist of contributions to LCO Key Projects (see https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/IJZVC71R2NTzQw4JDU82FnH?domain=lco.global ). Thus, proposals to support the new LCO Key Projects are strongly encouraged, but will be assessed on scientific merit like any other proposal.
Based on recent weather trends, LCO has revised the amount of available time. ANU's time for 2023B will be 75 hours on the 2m telescopes, 225 hours on the 1m telescopes, and 200 hours on the 0.4m telescopes. Note that this access can utilise any of the two 2m telescopes, thirteen 1m telescopes, or ten 0.4m telescopes in the entire LCO global network. During the 2023B semester, LCO will replace the 'Spectral' imager on the Siding Spring 2m telescope with the MuSCAT4 multi-channel imager (a copy of the MuSCAT3 at Haleakala), and will continue replacing the 0.4m telescopes and their SBIG cameras with new Planewave telescopes and QHY600 cameras. Please find further details, exposure time calculators, and target visibility calculators in the official LCO CfP at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/l-vMC81V0PTXzEDKoC1gdup?domain=lco.global
Proposed observations can use any of the three observing modes: standard queue-scheduled, Time Critical, and Rapid Response. All proposals that request Time Critical or Rapid Response time will be technically reviewed by LCO. The proposals must explicitly justify the need for TC/RR time. LCO will work with the PIs to make any changes to the queue/TC/RR allocations if it is determined that the science can be done with less restrictive scheduling modes. Proposals lacking justification will automatically get standard queue-mode observations.
Proposals will be assessed on scientific merit by the ANU TAC, taking into account that the Australian PI must be a significant team member. Note that this is not a call for Key Projects and any proposal that appears to compete with a Key Project would need to justify why it is different.
A maximum 2-page scientific and technical justification should be sent to lco_proposals at mso.anu.edu.au<mailto:lco_proposals at mso.anu.edu.au>
In addition, list on a separate page:
* Proposers and institutions.
* NEW: E-mail address of the PI (an LCO-registered e-mail, if available).
* Whether the data is an important part of a PhD thesis.
* Requested telescope(s) and instrument(s).
* Requested number of (integer) hours in each observing mode (queue/TC/RR) for each telescope/instrument, and minimum useful allocation.
* An estimate of how much time is required beyond this semester.
Please contact Christopher Onken<mailto:christopher.onken at anu.edu.au> if you have any questions about LCO, or ANU's access to the network.
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