2020 Vision: Towards a Sustainable OIR System

Open-access telescopes of all apertures are needed to operate a competitive and efficient national science program. While larger facilities contribute light-gathering power and angular resolution, smaller ones dominate for field of view, time-resolution, and especially, total available observing tim...

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Hauptverfasser: Oey, Sally, Maccarone, Tom, Walter, Fred, Bailyn, Charles, Gallagher, Jay, Henry, Todd, Oswalt, Terry, Buzasi, Derek, Smith, J. Allyn, Beaton, Rachael, Webb, Jim, Barlow, Brad, Bentz, Misty, Hebb, Leslie, Kelly, Patrick, Isler, Jedidah, Meyer, Michael, Salzer, John, Scaringi, Simone
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creator Oey, Sally
Maccarone, Tom
Walter, Fred
Bailyn, Charles
Gallagher, Jay
Henry, Todd
Oswalt, Terry
Buzasi, Derek
Smith, J. Allyn
Beaton, Rachael
Webb, Jim
Barlow, Brad
Bentz, Misty
Hebb, Leslie
Kelly, Patrick
Isler, Jedidah
Meyer, Michael
Salzer, John
Scaringi, Simone
description Open-access telescopes of all apertures are needed to operate a competitive and efficient national science program. While larger facilities contribute light-gathering power and angular resolution, smaller ones dominate for field of view, time-resolution, and especially, total available observing time, thereby enabling our entire, diversely-expert community. Smaller aperture telescopes therefore play a critical and indispensable role in advancing science. Thus, the divestment of NSF support for modest-aperture (1 - 4 m) public telescopes poses a serious threat to U.S. scientific leadership, which is compounded by the unknown consequences of the shift from observations driven by individual investigators to survey-driven science. Given the much higher cost efficiency and dramatic science returns for investments in modest aperture telescopes, it is hard to justify funding only the most expensive facilities. We therefore urge the Astro2020 panel to explicitly make the case for modest aperture facilities, and to recommend enhancing this funding stream to support and grow this critical component of the OIR System. Further study is urgently needed to prioritize the numerous exciting potential capabilities of smaller facilities,and to establish sustainable, long-term planning for the System.
doi_str_mv 10.48550/arxiv.1907.06715
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title 2020 Vision: Towards a Sustainable OIR System
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