A
New Customer for UKIRT
A
research institute in South Korea,
the Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute
(KASI), has acquired 22 nights of UKIRT time in
2012.
The
science project to be carried out during this time
is the UKIRT
Widefield Infrared
Survey for Fe+. The
objective of this programme
is to map 110 square degrees of the galactic plane
using a bespoke Fe+ filter, to be
supplied by KASI. Emission
from Fe+ is a good tracer of dense,
shock-excited gas, and the programme
will therefore provide valuable insight into star
formation and stellar feedback mechanisms. This survey
will complement the existing UKIRT Widefield Infrared
Survey for H2, and when taken
together these data will probe dynamically-active
components of star-forming regions, the circumstellar medium around
evolved stars and the interstellar medium. The survey
will also complement existing or upcoming surveys
(e.g., UKIDSS-GPS,
Spitzer-GLIMPSE, Spitzer-MIPSGAL, Akari, Herschel
Hi-Gal, JCMT JPS). The
project
team includes collaborating astronomers from Korea
and around the world, including two science staff at
the Joint Astronomy Centre.
KASI is
the second Korean organisation
to obtain time on UKIRT, the first being the Centre
for the Exploration of the Origin of the Universe, a
research group at Seoul National University.
Together, the
two groups will have access to 62 nights of
observing time in 2012.