GeminiFocus October 2013 | Page 22

2013B semester. The review will take a close look at the performance and operability of F2 in its present state with respect to successfully operating, maintaining, and supporting F2 as a facility-class Gemini instrument, and delivering the expected scientific return to the Gemini community. Feedback from users with early science data will be an important part of the review. The committee will also assess the remaining work going forward, including addressing the image quality and commissioning the powerful multi-object spectroscopy (MOS) mode. FLAMINGOS-2 is offered to the community again in long-slit and imaging modes for the 2014A semester. — Bernadette Rodgers GeMS/GSAOI Moving Toward More Robust Operations By the last quarter of 2013, we hope to have dramatically changed the way we operate the Gemini Multi-conjugate adaptive optics System (GeMS). GeMS has been producing science since late 2012 when the first System Verification (SV) observations occurred. This led to the writing of the first refereed journal article that includes GeMS data (“Haffner 16: A Young Moving Group in the Making,” Davidge et al., to appear in The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, see Science Highlights on page 12 of this issue). In 2013A, Gemini first offered GeMS to our user community for shared risk queue-based science. Now, in 2013B, the GeMS team is working to make it an operational queue instrument available to all Gemini users as part of normal operations. The major difficulty is that GeMS is an extremely complex instrument — in fact, GeMS has more wavefront sensors (12) than the total number of wavefront sensors the Observatory typically uses for all other science instruments combined at both sites (11). Adding to this complexity October2013 is the nightly logistical overhead of clearing targets with the U.S. Space Command (for laser propagation), which must be done several days before observations are made. In addition, aircraft spotters are necessary to ensure the safety of the many civilian aircraft flying above Cerro Pachón every night. The second key element in this effort will be the upcoming GeMS operational Acceptance Review (AR) in November. The AR will clearly define the extra support personnel and tasks needed prior to each GeMS run to ensure the instrument is ready for science. This effort will include members of many groups across Gemini — Science Operations, Optical Systems, Electronics and Instrumentation, Systems Engineering, Software, Information Systems, and, of course, the Adaptive Optics group — and demand that they work in a coordinated manner. In addition, the AR will stress that every successful night of GeMS operation requires careful communication between the telescope operator, observer, laser technician, adaptive optics group support, and laser spotters. The key to a successful transition to routine queue operations of GeMS is communication between all of these highly technically savvy individuals. We also expect the AR to document key performance metrics and identify areas where improvements can be made in 2014 and beyond. As we transition to queue operations, the roles and communications defined in the AR will allow Gemini to navigate a clear path to state-of-the-art adaptive optics success. During the Chilean winter in June and July, many hardware and software improvements were made to the GeMS system, including the Gemini South Adaptive Optics Imager (GSAOI, the science camera behind GeMS), the laser used to produce the artificial guide stars, and Canopus (the adaptive optics instrument itself). These improvements were GeminiFocus 22