GeminiFocus 2014 Year in Review | Page 55

of GPI public data (viewable here) from the 2013 runs. Further public release data will be available following future Verification and Commissioning runs. In February, Gemini announced a GPI early call for science proposals. A number of proposals were received before the month’s end. Sixteen of these proposals were selected and awarded time (view here). A variety of exciting programs will use three different instrument observing modes: direct, coronagraphic, and polarimetric observing. Observations will have begun on April 20th. The proprietary period for Early Science data is two months. GPI has been offered for general use in 2014B. At the same time, the GPI Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) will commence. GPIES is an 890-hour exoplanet survey campaign to observe ~600 stars spanning a range of spectral types from A-M. The team will use published young association catalogs and a proprietary list that adds several hundred newly discovered young (<100 million years (Myr) old, <245 light-years (ly) distant) and adolescent January 2015 (<300 Myr, <115 ly) stars. The latter, older but closer than the known young associations, allow our survey to probe within the 5 astronomical units ice line, where it is cold enough for hydrogen compounds such as water, ammonia, and methane to condense into solid ice grains. Simulations predict this survey will discover approximately 50 exoplanets, increasing the number of exoplanet images by an order of magnitude, enough for statistical investigations. (More information can be found here.) There is still much work to be completed both at Gemini South and among the groups working on the Verification and Commissioning tasks. This work is due to ramp down towards the end of 2014 and GPI will become an operational instrument. Given the early science programs, the GPIES, and the general 2014B observations, it shouldn’t be too long before GPI discovers its first exoplanet! For the latest information stay connected to the Gemini Facebook page. 2014 Year in Review GeminiFocus 53