International Consortia Seek Brazilian Astronomers and Funding
Hello reader!
It follows one article
published on the day (01/22) in the website of the ”Agência FAPESP” noting that
International Consortia
seek Brazilian Astronomers and funding.
Duda Falcão
Articles
International
Consortia Seek
Brazilian Astronomers and Funding
By Elton
Alisson
January 22,
2014
(illustration:
GMT)
Country’s astronomy community ponders participation in two megatelescope projects with construction beginning in 2014 |
Agência FAPESP – Brazilian scientific production in astronomy
has grown in the past decade. The number of scientific articles published
annually in the field by Brazilian scientists increased from 150 in 1995 to 230
in 2010. According to researchers in this area, part of this increase in
scientific production results from Brazil’s participation in international
consortia that guarantee access to observational instruments for which
competition is strong.
The main initiatives were participation in observatories such as Gemini,
which began operations in 2004 with two “twin” telescopes (one in the Chilean
Andes and another in Hawaii), and the Southern Observatory for Astrophysical
Research (SOAR), inaugurated in the Andes in 2005.
Brazil currently has a 6% share of the observations made with Gemini,
whose telescopes have main mirrors of 8.1 meters in diameter. The Brazilian
share in SOAR, which has mirrors of 4.2 meters in diameter, is 30%. Brazilian
participation in the two observatories is funded by FAPESP and other research
foundations in the country.
“The increase in the number of articles published by Brazilian
astronomers in the past few years has an absolutely direct relationship to
participation in Gemini and SOAR,” said João Steiner, a professor at the
Astronomy, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences Institute at Universidade de São
Paulo (IAG-USP).
“We had been stalled for almost a decade in terms of publication of
scientific articles and the number of master’s and PhD students. When Gemini
and SOAR began operations, these two indicators then grew at a very fast pace,”
he recalls.
Currently, the research community in the area is being invited to participate
in and to help fund two of the largest megatelescope construction projects
underway worldwide: the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT), planned by a consortium
of institutions in the United States, Australia and South Korea; and the
European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT), planned by the European Southern
Observatory (ESO).
Both will be built in Chile because the sky of the Southern Hemisphere
is considered much richer than the Northern Hemisphere in terms of potential
astronomical observations. Additionally, sites such as the Andes mountain range
in Northern Chile are available for making observations.
With construction slated to start in July 2014 in Cerro Las Campanas,
the GMT will contain seven round, segmented mirrors, each 8.4 meters in diameter.
Gathered like flower petals around a central bulb, they will form an optical
surface with a 24-meter diameter. The GMT is slated to come on line in 2019.
The project is budgeted at US$ 690 million (roughly R$ 1.6 billion),
with forecasts of US$ 30 million for each year that construction is delayed.
For this reason, the coordinators of the project are hastening the approval
process from institutions that have shown interest in participating in the
project. Among these institutions are the universities of Arizona, Texas and
Chicago and Texas A&M University – all in the United States – and the
Australian National University.
The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and the Carnegie
Institute of Science, both in the United States, the South Korea Institute of
Astronomic and Space Sciences and Astronomy Australia Limited (AAL) also
confirmed interest in the project.
“The most urgent and critical challenge for GMT is to obtain financing
for the construction phase,” explained Wendy Freedman, president of the
consortium, during a workshop on the project held on November 13 and 14, 2013
at FAPESP’s headquarters in São Paulo.
The event was part of FAPESP’s evaluation process for a request for
funding to support participation in GMT. The request was submitted by
researchers from universities and institutions in São Paulo. Following peer
review, gauging the São Paulo research community’s interest, as well as the
potential involvement of companies in the state, became a clear necessity as
part of the larger analysis process.
Under the proposal, FAPESP would have a 4% stake in the project. This
stake would guarantee São Paulo researchers 4% of the observation time at the
observatory annually. The organizers are requesting US$ 40 million in funding
from FAPESP.
The São Paulo astronomers would also have a seat on the consortium’s
board, a vote in the decisions for the project and an opportunity to
participate in building the telescope (including the construction of parts of
the telescope, such as the dome, which will require 4,000 tons of steel, and
the development of scientific instrumentation). At the beginning of November,
GMT engineers held an “Industry Day” at FAPESP to present information on
possible participation in building the telescope to local potential suppliers
and service providers.
“We have no doubt about the scientific importance of GMT. But the role
that São Paulo researchers will play must be clearly defined, and we must know
exactly what the guarantees and risks are, in addition to knowing which technologies
can be created through this international project,” said Hernan Chaimovich,
special aide to the Scientific Department at FAPESP, at the event’s opening on
November 13.
Brazil and the ESO
With the ESO, in contrast, efforts have been ongoing for several years
to encourage the Brazilian government to ratify the country’s membership in the
European astronomy consortium and to participate in the construction of the
E-ELT and the institution’s other projects.
With construction also slated to begin in 2014, the E-ELT, which will
have a 39-meter diameter mirror and will be nestled on top of a mountain in
Chile’s Cerro Armazones range, will be the largest of the extremely large
telescopes. Construction should be complete in 2023.
The main mirror is expected to consist of 800 hexagonal segments, each
one meter in size, that will form a honeycomb of mirrors with the capacity to
capture 15 times more light than the largest telescope in operation today, Gran
Telescopio Canarias (Canaries Great Telescope), with 10.4 meters in diameter.
To participate in the construction of the telescope, however, Brazil
must pass legislation approving membership in the European astronomy
consortium. A bill is currently under study in the National Congress.
“By entering the ESO, Brazil will have the opportunity to join a
long-standing astronomy research program that is perhaps the world’s best today
and in which engineers, astronomers and high-tech companies have a chance to
work together,” said the organization’s General Director, Tim de Zeeuw, during
the visit of a group of Brazilian journalists to the ESO’s installations in
Chile at the beginning of November at the organization’s request.
Although it is not officially an associate, Brazil is being treated and
cited as an official member in several types of promotional materials for the
ESO, for example, on the website. Moreover, there are several references to the
country at the organization’s installations in Chile.
For example, the Brazilian flag is flying alongside those of the 14
European countries that are official members of the consortium at the ESO
observatory on the Cerro Paranal, a 2,600-meter mountain located in the Atacama
desert near Cerro Armazones.
The landscape is so similar to Mars that during the first week of
October, the European Space Agency (ESA) conducted a test with the Bridget
robot for a future exploratory mission on the Red Planet.
The country is also mentioned in one of the observatory’s much less
visible levels: an underground tunnel painted in green and yellow, located in
the Control Center of the Very Large Telescope (VLT). The tunnel is called
“Brazil Avenue”, an allusion to a Brazilian telenovela currently shown in Chile.
Brazilian astronomers have sporadically made observations using the
telescopes of the European consortium. “Brazilian proposals for observation
time at VLT have not been consistent. Of the almost 1,000 proposals that we
receive per year, only 2% are from Brazilian colleagues,” explained Claudio de
Figueiredo Melo, who has been at the ESO in Chile since 2003 and who in April
was appointed to one of the most important positions in the hierarchy of the
astronomy research consortium: scientific director.
In August, in an effort to accelerate the integration of the scientific
community of astronomers with the ESO, Melo and São Paulo researcher Dimitri
Alexei Gadotti – who did his doctoral and post-doctoral work as a FAPESP fellow and is part of the
permanent team of the consortium’s astronomers – visited several universities
and research institutions in Brazil to describe research opportunities
available on the telescopes of the Chilean observatory and to explain how time
request proposals should be formatted.
In 2011 and 2013, the ESO also held an “Industry Day” to offer Brazilian
companies development opportunities for constructing scientific instrumentation
of the telescopes. Recently, the ESO also approved a project for the
development of the first Brazilian instrument to be integrated into one of the
VLT telescopes on Cerro Paranal.
The instrument, known as CUBES, is being built by researchers at IAG-USP
in collaboration with colleagues from the National Astrophysics Laboratory in
Minas Gerais.
CUBES is the acronym for Cassegrain U-band Brazilian-ESO Spectrograph,
which consists of a low- to medium-wavelength spectrograph that is specialized
to perform ultraviolet wavelength observations. These observations will be
focused on studies of the chemical composition of galaxies. The project will
initially be funded by the LNA and IAG.
Source: WebSite Agência FAPESP -
http://agencia.fapesp.br/en/
Mais uma vez, é como eu vivo dizendo...
ResponderExcluirDependeu do governo, ou de uma agência do governo, ferrou !!!
Nunca vai sair nada que preste daí.
Abs.