GeminiFocus October 2016 | Page 19

for Gemini North. The timeline is less certain, but we would expect to have the laser on sky sometime in 2018. Coming Soon: Gemini Instrument Upgrade Projects — Request for Proposals Gemini Observatory is planning to invite the community to participate in the 2016 Request for Proposals (RfP) for Instrument Upgrades. This initiative aims to establish annual proposal calls for science-driven upgrades to Gemini’s facility instruments, including projects that may rely upon in-kind contributions or telescope time as compensation. This year, Gemini will provide a total budget of 600,000 USD to fund one or more projects. The available budget was developed to fund one small (~100,000 USD) and one medium (~500,000 USD) upgrades, but we are open to the distribution of funds from 0 to the 600,000 USD total available budget. After the start of the project, the team completed the design of the filters and finished the specifications in collaboration with Gemini’s F-2 team. A TAMU subcontract is now making filters and planning the quality check tests the team will execute in both the laboratory and the Gemini telescope. The aim is to make this new capability available to the community in the second quarter of 2017, enabling a wide range of potential science from detecting young stellar object candidates in deeply obscured star-forming regions, to deep Kband imaging to study the demography of high-redshift massive galaxies. To encourage a wide variety of participant organizations in this opportunity, Gemini will provide up to one night (10 hours) of observing time per project to be used on demonstrating the scientific potential of the upgraded instrument. The RfP will be released by or in October 2016 and will remain open through the end of the year. Further information and updates can be found here. In the 2015 RfP, the total budget was 100,000 USD and the award went to Casey Papovich and his team from Texas A&M University and astronomers from the University of Toronto, Swinburne University of Technology, Leiden University, and Macquaire University. The project will upgrade the near-Infrared widefield imager and multi-object spectrometer FLAMINGOS-2 (F-2) with two medium-band filters designed to split the 1.9-2.5 micron spectral range for sensitive imaging surveys of very red objects. October 2016 GeminiFocus 17