From the Director's Desk
From the Director's Desk
In my previous
column
in this newsletter, I alluded to a reorganisation of
the JCMT Group at the JAC, which was at that time in the works. This change
has since been approved and fully implemented. The post of Associate
Director, formerly held by Dr Per Friberg, has been replaced by two new
positions: a Head of JCMT Instrumentation and a Head of JCMT Operations.
The former post has been taken by Per, while Dr Remo Tilanus has been
appointed to the latter. Both Per and Remo have taken up their new duties
with energy and enthusiasm, and we are already reaping the benefits of
this.
The major development at the telescope since my last column is the
continued, incremental implementation of the
Observation Management Project
(OMP). The Observing Tool released for semester 03B, which has just started
as I write this, allows PIs to enter both heterodyne and SCUBA programmes
into the database for the first time. Together with the queue management
tools and PI feedback tools, the OMP software suite is now virtually
complete. Our next target in this development is a thorough revision and
reorganisation of the JCMT web pages to fully integrate the new observing
paradigm. I remain convinced that the shift to flexible scheduling, which
drove the development of the OMP, will enhance the scientific productivity
of the JCMT.
At the time of writing, the facility and instruments are performing well.
The secondary mirror unit was removed from the telescope in July for its
first complete overhaul in many years: the mechanisms were stripped,
cleaned, lubricated and reassembled. In the course of this work we
discovered some failure modes waiting to happen, so the downtime was well
worth it. The heterodyne receivers are all functioning well, with the
exception of RxW, in which one C-band mixer recently failed; the device is
currently at MRAO for assessment. SCUBA has continued to perform reliably
since the cryogenic repair last November, but it continues to exhibit
erratic noise levels, for reasons which we have so far been unable to
identify.
The next new instrument to arrive at the JCMT will be
THUMPER, a 200µm
imaging photometer being developed at Cardiff (PI: Dr Derek Ward-Thompson).
A four-week period of daytime integration work is scheduled to begin on 3
November. THUMPER has been awarded 9 shifts during the remainder of
semester 03B for astronomical commissioning, which will be flexibly
scheduled to take advantage of the best weather as it occurs. Assuming all
goes well, THUMPER will then be available to the entire JCMT community as a
common-user instrument beginning in semester 04A.
Looking ahead, 2004 will be an extremely busy year at the JCMT. ACSIS, the
new correlator which will replace the venerable DAS, is currently scheduled
to arrive in March. Infrastructure work is already in progress to make room
for the four racks of ACSIS electronics on the carousel floor.
HARP-B, the
imaging heterodyne receiver which will replace the current workhorse
instrument RxB, will arrive not long afterwards. The commissioning of these
two instruments will keep our engineering, software and scientific staff
extremely busy. Finally, a new polarimeter called
ROVER, being developed
for use with HARP-B and RxA, has already been used successfully at IRAM and
will be ready for commissioning at the JCMT during 2004.
The flagship development for the JCMT is, of course,
SCUBA-2. I am pleased
to be able to report that the project is making excellent technical
progress, and is on schedule for delivery in late 2005. Unfortunately, we
have not yet identified sufficient funds to enable us to build the
instrument to specification: the funds received to date from the UK Office
of Science and Technology, the Canada Foundation for Innovation and the
JCMT Development Fund make up about 85% of the total cost. While a descope
plan is in place should it be needed, I am busily seeking the additional
funds which will enable the full instrument to be built. This is a critical
element of the strategic plan for the JCMT.
Our current long-range plan calls for the following instrument suite on the
JCMT from 2006 onwards: HARP-B, with ROVER as its polarimeter; SCUBA-2; and
two ancillary instruments for SCUBA-2, a Fourier transform spectrometer and
a polarimeter, which are being developed in Canada. Because these
instruments lend themselves to large-scale survey-style observations
(particularly SCUBA-2), it is appropriate at this time to begin the
development of a survey strategy. In order that this strategy may be driven
by the user community, the JCMT Board has designated three individuals to
lead this debate within their countries: Rob Ivison (UK), Gilles Joncas
(Canada) and Paul van der Werf (Netherlands). The development of a robust
and scientifically strong survey strategy which will take maximum advantage
of the JCMT's future capabilities is critical for the future of the
facility, and I encourage any users with an interest in this development to
contact one of the individuals listed above.
Although the Board approved the development of linked interferometry with
the SMA in 1996, little has happened since then while we have waited for
the SMA to be ready. In view of the time which has now passed since the
Board's decision and the developments elsewhere in submm interferometry
(e.g., CARMA), I have convened an ad hoc panel from amongst the community
to review the scientific case for this project. The JAC will, in parallel,
review the technical plan and the cost of the project. The future of this
project will, on the basis of these assessments, be reconsidered by the
Board at its next meeting in November.
The end of June marked the end of an era at the JCMT, when we said
farewell to Henry Matthews, who was recalled to Canada by the HIA. Henry had
been with the JCMT for 15 years, and his vast experience with the
observatory will be missed. I wish him every success in his new position
at DRAO. Henry has been replaced by
Ming Zhu, a former PhD student and Research Associate of Ernie Seaquist.
Ming and Gerald Moriarty Schieven will continue to provide support for
Canadian users of the JCMT. In other personnel matters, Greg Sarge, our
newest Telescope System Specialist, joined us in early July.
Professor Gary Davis
Director JCMT
4 August 2003
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Gary Davis - Director JCMT
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