GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review | Page 48

ing the loss of a complete night to the passage of Tropical Storm Flossie. The science included measuring the diameters of nearby stars, Kepler exoplanet confirmations, and observations of Pluto and Charon — a wide range of exciting science observations for a niche capability. It is expected that the instrument will be offered again for 2014B; its capabilities and performance are summarized here: http://www.gemini.edu/ sciops/instruments/dssi-speckle-camera-north In November, DSSI was succeeded onto Gemini North by TEXES, a mid-IR high-resolution spectrometer making its third visit to the telescope (the last having been before 2010). The winter weather was not very helpful, but the TEXES team still obtained useful observations on a mini-queue of programs granted by the Time Allocation Committee, with a total of 90 hours. DSSI and TEXES were oversubscribed by factors of two and three, respectively. User Software Improvements The UREKA Unified Release In june, we released a new a new mechanism for installing and running the Gemini reduction package and all of its supporting software. The idea of Ureka (also known as the “unified release”) is to bundle all the required pieces and release them together in one easily-installed package. Ureka has the added bonus of not interfering with any existing installations. A quote from the Ureka page sums up what it’s about: “Ureka is a collection of useful astronomy software that is generally centered around Python and IRAF. The software provides everything you need to run the data reduction packages provided by the Space Telescope Science Institute and Gemini.” Since its Beta release to the community, 46 Ureka has been downloaded by hundreds of users, and feedback is being used to bring it to production release status. Observatory Control Software Improvements Work has been going on “under the hood” of the other operations software to enable significant future improvements, and to make the software more maintainable. Overall, the OCS (Observatory Control Software) has been reduced in size by about 1/3, due to the removal of internal communications layer. Users will not see much change, though the changes also required the implementation of “Sync” to replace the old “Fetch/Store” mechanism, which should be simpler for PIs to use, and prevent data loss. This change was included in the December 2013 software release. Users’ Data Reduction Forum Added We are pleased to announce the release of the Gemini Data Reduction User Forum, located at: http://drforum.gemini.edu/. This is intended as a user-supported site for the trading of ideas, scripts, and best practices, and for taking part in user-driven public discussions on data reduction processes and strategies. If you have written a script, procedure, tip, or description of your own process that you think other Gemini users may find helpful in reducing their data sets, please consider posting it here. The Forum’s “start here” page (http://drforum. gemini.edu/start-here/) gives a brief introduction and some points to note when posting or taking part in discussions. Both the Observatory and the Users’ Committee for Gemini are keen to see this Forum well utilized and become helpful to a broad segment of our user community. To encourage your involvement, Gemini Director Markus Kissler-Patig has agreed to award Director’s Discretionary ob- GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review January2014