GeminiFocus January 2020 | Page 3

Jennifer Lotz Director’s Message A New Decade for Gemini Observatory Begins Happy New Year to everyone in the Gemini Observatory community! The past year has en- compassed a number of “firsts” and milestones for me, personally, as Gemini Director: I host- ed my first Gemini Observatory open house at the 2019 winter American Astronomical So- ciety meeting; visited Korea and Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) for the first time (and got some very important lessons on how to use sujeo, the super-skinny metal Korean chopsticks); met with Argentinian astronomers for the first time in their country at Reunión annual de la Asociación Argentina de Astronomía and at the Universidad Nacional de La Plata; worked on the basics of Chilean Spanish (but still have a long way to go); got a crash course on the nuances of Hawaiian politics and history; and, last but not least, kicked- off the October launch of the National Science Foundation’s (NSF’s) National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory. The best parts of the year were my interactions with Gemini’s global community, and learn- ing about the fantastic scientific discoveries led by our users: observations from the Gemini Near-InfraRed Spectrometer (GNIRS) pinned down the mass of the supermassive black hole of a gravitationally-lensed quasar at the edge of the Universe (Fan et al., 2019); ultra- sharp near-infrared images from Gemini’s multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) imager GeMS/GSAOI uncovered the age of one of the oldest star clusters in our Galaxy (Kerber et al., 2019); the visiting high-resolution spectrograph IGRINS discovered an extremely rare molecular composition of carbon monoxide and nitrogen in the ices of Triton, Neptune’s largest moon (Tegler et al., 2019); the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) of over 500 stars concluded its five-year run and revealed very different pathways for the for- January 2020 GeminiFocus 1