Title: The ASTRONET Infrastructure Roadmap
1The ASTRONET Infrastructure Roadmap
Mike Bode Astrophysics Research Institute,
Liverpool JMU, UK (and many others ...)
2Outline
- Background
- Panels and Working Group
- Programme of Work
- Interrelationships and Initial Findings
- Concluding Remarks
3- Large projects proposed for the next 10-20
years in astronomy constitute ?? billion - EU only provide for a few of this cost the
funding agencies the rest - ASTRONET was thus established to help
national funding agencies to take science-based,
rational, coordinated decisions for the long term
benefit of European astronomy - and, at a higher
level, to help unlock further necessary resource
for our science -
4Developing the Roadmap
Brief To assemble a plan for the development of
the infrastructures that will enable European
Astronomy to deliver the Science Vision -
Taking the Science Vision as the point of
departure - Covering both ground
space-based facilities - Including AVO,
(super)computing, theory, HR issues,
outreach, education and training, industrial
links - Incorporating existing ESO, ESA
(etc.) plans as far as possible, and having a
global perspective - Fitting within reasonable
budgetary envelopes schedules! Got
underway in earnest Autumn 2006
5Roadmap Panels (Chairs, Co-chairs)
A. high energy astrophysics, astroparticle
astrophysics, gravitational waves Guenther
Hasinger, Patrizia Caraveo B. UVOIR and
radio/mm astronomy Michael Grewing, Laurent
Vigroux C. solar telescopes, solar system
missions, laboratory studies Mats Carlsson,
Therese Encrenaz) D. theory, computing
facilities and networks, virtual
observatory Francoise Combes, Paolo
Padovani E. education, recruitment and
training, public outreach Rosa Maria Ros, Bob
Fosbury
6INFRASTRUCTURE ROADMAP PANEL MEMBERS
Panel B
Panel A
7INFRASTRUCTURE ROADMAP PANEL MEMBERS
Panel C
Panel D
8INFRASTRUCTURE ROADMAP PANEL MEMBERS
Panel E
9Roadmap Working Group
Chair Mike Bode Ex-Officio Members
Chairs and Co-chairs of the 5 Panels Members at
Large Catherine Turon (Observatoire de Paris),
Xavier Barcons (CSIC-UC), Jean Clavel
(ESA-ESTEC), Phil Diamond (RadioNet), Gerry
Gilmore (OPTICON),Thijs van der Hulst
(Groningen), Guy Monnet (ESO), Hans-Walter Rix
(MPIA), Ian Robson (UK ATC), Guy Wormser
(CNRS/IN2P3) Assistant Scientists Maria Cruz
(Liverpool JMU), Frank Molster (NWO) gt 60
people involved (including Panel members)
10Working Group
Role is to - assist the Panels in their
tasks - ensure consistency of approach and
thoroughness - receive and review the reports
of the Panels - synthesise these to optimise
the delivery of the Science Vision 12
February 2008 workshop held with the funding
agencies to ensure that the Roadmap is infused
with realism - refinements to the draft completed
as a result, prior to release for wide discussion
early May
11Programme of Work
- 7 Working Group and 26 Panel meetings held since
March 2007. - Panels A-C Questionnaire sent to 112 facilities
(gt90 returns by early July 2007 facilities list
posted on ASTRONET website). - Evaluation template formulated and completed by
each assigned Panel rapporteur for each facility.
- Evaluation Criteria developed to give first-pass
rankings, then each facility further discussed
and judgements refined (e.g. in the light of the
ESA Cosmic Vision results). - Science Vision launched 28 Sept 2007 ESA Cosmic
Vision results available 17 October 2007 to
Panels.
12Criteria for Inclusion in Ranking (of Panels A-C)
- Main focus is on future facilities (includes
well-defined major upgrades and significant
operational prolongations). - Only facilities with a significant European
content (likely funding requirement) and well
enough developed to be able to be judged
adequately are included. - European funding requirement gt 10M capital cost
and/or gt 10M operational cost over 5 years
(unless special reason). - Only those facilities where a major European
funding decision expected to be required from
2009- were included. - It is however better to have too much than too
little information overall!
13Evaluation Framework
- Broad categories of prioritisation (High, Medium
and Low only High normally discussed in
detail in final report other facilities
may be included for context and some smaller
scale current facilities have been grouped). - Sub-divided into cost categories
- Small 10M-50M Medium 50M-400M Large
gt400M - (Small cf. last Decadal Survey for
Ground-based Medium, Large fits with Cosmic
Vision wrt M missions and Flagships for
Space-based, including instruments) - Timescale division (to full operation)
Short-term (-2015) Medium Term (2016-2020)
Long-term (2020) - Evaluation criteria included Scientific Impact
(relation to delivering SV), Uniqueness, European
Involvement, User Base, Industrial Relevance
(TRL) - gave a first-pass ranked list
14Panels D and E
- Terms of reference somewhat different from Panels
A, B, C - Specific questions included in the questionnaire
to facilities, but also undertook information
gathering as detailed in Chapters 6 and 7 of the
draft Report - Panel D gave members responsibility for specific
areas - Panel E sub-divided into Task Groups
- Information exchange with other Panels
15Interrelationships
- ESO and ESA representatives on the WG -
Similarly for OPTICON and RadioNet -
EuroPlaNET representation on Panel C (and on WG
in initial phases) - Euro-VO representation on
Panel D and WG - EAAE representation on Panel E
and WG - Information exchange with ASPERA,
including round-table meetings - ESFRI links
(but need to be strengthened)
16Initial Overall Prioritisation (A-C)
- Ground-based, Large Scale
- ELT and SKA (phasing important)
- Ground-based, Medium Scale
- EST
- CTA
- KM3NeT
- Ground-based, Small scale
- Wide Field, Multiplexed Spectrograph (8-10m
tels) - ( Optimisation of access to existing telescopes
Solar, 2-4m and 8-10m optical/IR, radio and
mm-submm)
17Initial Prioritisation (cont.)
- Space-Based, Large Scale
- LISA and XEUS
- TANDEM/LAPLACE
- ExoMars
- ( Darwin, FIRI and PHOIBOS for further
development) - Space-Based, Medium Scale
- GAIA Data Processing and Analysis
- EUCLID
- Cross-scale, PLATO, Simbol-X and SPICA
- Marco Polo
- (Plus continued European contribution to
operation of XMM-Newton, Integral, HST, Cluster,
STEREO, Hinode)
18Other Recommendations are made in the areas of
- Laboratory Astrophysics
- Theory, Computing and VO
- Education, recruitment and training, public
outreach and industrial links - (see very detailed summaries in Panel C, D and E
reports and presentations tomorrow for all panels)
19Outline timetable
- Appointment of Panel (Co-)Chairs and constitution
of Working Group Jan 2007 - Appointment of Panel Members and schedule first
Panel meetings Mar 2007 - First Draft Panel Reports
Oct 2007 - First Draft Working Group Report
Dec 2007 - Workshop with Agencies
Feb 2008 - Public Draft Roadmap released, forum open early
May 2008 - Roadmap Symposium (Liverpool) 16-19 Jun
2008 - Online forum closes 4 July 2008
- Final Panel and Working Group meetings
July-Aug 2008 - Final Roadmap Document published by 31 Oct
2008
Implementation Phase
20About This Symposium
- An opportunity to present our conclusions so far,
but - Do they make sense?
- How far away from reality are we?
- What has been missed?
- How do we proceed from here?
- Note opportunity for very short additional
presentations in discussion sessions of each
Panel - see appropriate Panel Chair/Co-chair in
advance to arrange -
An interesting (and hopefully enjoyable) few days
ahead!