PANEL REPORTS—New Worlds, New Horizons in Astronomy and Astrophysics
NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS
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NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the panels responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance.
This study was supported by Contract NNX08AN97G between the National Academy of Sciences and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Contract AST-0743899 between the National Academy of Sciences and the National Science Foundation, and Contract DE-FG02-08ER41542 between the National Academy of Sciences and the U.S. Department of Energy. Support for this study was also provided by the Vesto Slipher Fund. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the organizations that provided support for the project.
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THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
Advisers to the Nation on Science, Engineering, and Medicine
The National Academy of Sciences is a private, nonprofit, self-perpetuating society of distinguished scholars engaged in scientific and engineering research, dedicated to the furtherance of science and technology and to their use for the general welfare. Upon the authority of the charter granted to it by the Congress in 1863, the Academy has a mandate that requires it to advise the federal government on scientific and technical matters. Dr. Ralph J. Cicerone is president of the National Academy of Sciences.
The National Academy of Engineering was established in 1964, under the charter of the National Academy of Sciences, as a parallel organization of outstanding engineers. It is autonomous in its administration and in the selection of its members, sharing with the National Academy of Sciences the responsibility for advising the federal government. The National Academy of Engineering also sponsors engineering programs aimed at meeting national needs, encourages education and research, and recognizes the superior achievements of engineers. Dr. Charles M. Vest is president of the National Academy of Engineering.
The Institute of Medicine was established in 1970 by the National Academy of Sciences to secure the services of eminent members of appropriate professions in the examination of policy matters pertaining to the health of the public. The Institute acts under the responsibility given to the National Academy of Sciences by its congressional charter to be an adviser to the federal government and, upon its own initiative, to identify issues of medical care, research, and education. Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg is president of the Institute of Medicine.
The National Research Council was organized by the National Academy of Sciences in 1916 to associate the broad community of science and technology with the Academy’s purposes of furthering knowledge and advising the federal government. Functioning in accordance with general policies determined by the Academy, the Council has become the principal operating agency of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering in providing services to the government, the public, and the scientific and engineering communities. The Council is administered jointly by both Academies and the Institute of Medicine. Dr. Ralph J. Cicerone and Dr. Charles M. Vest are chair and vice chair, respectively, of the National Research Council.
SCIENCE FRONTIERS PANELS
Panel on Cosmology and Fundamental Physics
DAVID N. SPERGEL,
Princeton University,
Chair
DAVID WEINBERG,
Ohio State University,
Vice Chair
RACHEL BEAN,
Cornell University
NEIL CORNISH,
Montana State University
JONATHAN FENG,
University of California, Irvine
ALEX V. FILIPPENKO,
University of California, Berkeley
WICK C. HAXTON,
University of California, Berkeley
MARC P. KAMIONKOWSKI,
California Institute of Technology
LISA RANDALL,
Harvard University
EUN-SUK SEO,
University of Maryland
DAVID TYTLER,
University of California, San Diego
CLIFFORD M. WILL,
Washington University
Panel on the Galactic Neighborhood
MICHAEL J. SHULL,
University of Colorado,
Chair
JULIANNE DALCANTON,
University of Washington,
Vice Chair
LEO BLITZ,
University of California, Berkeley
BRUCE T. DRAINE,
Princeton University
ROBERT FESEN,
Dartmouth University
KARL GEBHARDT,
University of Texas
JUNA KOLLMEIER,
Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington
CRYSTAL MARTIN,
University of California, Santa Barbara
JASON TUMLINSON,
Space Telescope Science Institute
DANIEL WANG,
University of Massachusetts
DENNIS ZARITSKY,
University of Arizona
STEPHEN E. ZEPF,
Michigan State University
Panel on Galaxies Across Cosmic Time
C. MEGAN URRY,
Yale University,
Chair
MITCHELL C. BEGELMAN,
University of Colorado,
Vice Chair
NETA A. BAHCALL,
Princeton University
ANDREW J. BAKER,
Rutgers University
ROMEEL DAVÉ,
University of Arizona
TIZIANA DI MATTEO,
Carnegie Mellon University
HENRIC S.W. KRAWCZYNSKI,
Washington University
JOSEPH MOHR,
Ludwig Maximilian University
RICHARD F. MUSHOTZKY,
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
CHRISTOPHER S. REYNOLDS,
University of Maryland
ALICE SHAPLEY,
University of California, Los Angeles
TOMMASO TREU,
University of California, Santa Barbara
JAQUELINE H. VAN GORKOM,
Columbia University
ERIC M. WILCOTS,
University of Wisconsin
Panel on Planetary Systems and Star Formation
LEE W. HARTMANN,
University of Michigan,
Chair
DAN M. WATSON,
University of Rochester,
Vice Chair
HECTOR ARCE,
Yale University
CLAIRE CHANDLER,
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
DAVID CHARBONNEAU,
Harvard University
EUGENE CHIANG,
University of California, Berkeley
SUZAN EDWARDS,
Smith College
ERIC HERBST,
Ohio State University
DAVID C. JEWITT,
University of California, Los Angeles
JAMES P. LLOYD,
Cornell University
EVE C. OSTRIKER,
University of Maryland
DAVID J. STEVENSON,
California Institute of Technology
JONATHAN C. TAN,
University of Florida
Panel on Stars and Stellar Evolution
ROGER A. CHEVALIER,
University of Virginia,
Chair
ROBERT P. KIRSHNER,
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics,
Vice Chair
DEEPTO CHAKRABARTY,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
SUZANNE HAWLEY,
University of Washington
JEFFREY R. KUHN,
University of Hawaii
STANLEY OWOCKI,
University of Delaware
MARC PINSONNEAULT,
Ohio State University
ELIOT QUATAERT,
University of California, Berkeley
SCOTT RANSOM,
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
HENDRIK SCHATZ,
Michigan State University
LEE ANNE WILLSON,
Iowa State University
STANFORD E. WOOSLEY,
University of California, Santa Cruz
Staff
DONALD C. SHAPERO, Director,
Board on Physics and Astronomy (BPA)
MICHAEL H. MOLONEY,
Astro2010 Study Director and Director, Space Studies Board (SSB)
BRANT L. SPONBERG, Associate Director,
SSB (until December 2009)
ROBERT L. RIEMER, Senior Program Officer,
BPA
DAVID B. LANG, Program Officer,
BPA
CARMELA CHAMBERLAIN, Administrative Coordinator,
SSB
CATHERINE A. GRUBER, Editor,
SSB
CARYN J. KNUTSEN, Research Associate,
BPA
LaVITA COATES-FOGLE, Senior Program Assistant,
BPA (until October 2009)
BETH DOLAN, Financial Associate,
BPA
PROGRAM PRIORITIZATION PANELS
Panel on Electromagnetic Observations from Space
ALAN DRESSLER,
Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington,
Chair
MICHAEL BAY,
Bay Engineering Innovations
ALAN P. BOSS,
Carnegie Institution of Washington
MARK DEVLIN,
University of Pennsylvania
MEGAN DONAHUE,
Michigan State University
BRENNA FLAUGHER,
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
TOM GREENE,
NASA Ames Research Center
PURAGRA (RAJA) GUHATHAKURTA,
University of California Observatories/Lick Observatory
MICHAEL G. HAUSER,
Space Telescope Science Institute
HAROLD McALISTER,
Georgia State University
PETER F. MICHELSON,
Stanford University
BEN R. OPPENHEIMER,
American Museum of Natural History
FRITS PAERELS,
Columbia University
GEORGE H. RIEKE,
Steward Observatory, University of Arizona
ADAM G. RIESS,
Johns Hopkins University
PAUL L. SCHECHTER,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
TODD TRIPP,
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Panel on Optical and Infrared Astronomy from the Ground
PATRICK S. OSMER,
Ohio State University,
Chair
MICHAEL SKRUTSKIE,
University of Virginia,
Vice Chair
CHARLES BAILYN,
Yale University
BETSY BARTON,
University of California, Irvine
TODD A. BOROSON,
National Optical Astronomy Observatory
DANIEL EISENSTEIN,
University of Arizona
ANDREA M. GHEZ,
University of California, Los Angeles
J. TODD HOEKSEMA,
Stanford University
ROBERT P. KIRSHNER,
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
BRUCE MACINTOSH,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
PIERO MADAU,
University of California, Santa Cruz
JOHN MONNIER,
University of Michigan
I. NEILL REID,
Space Telescope Science Institute
CHARLES E. WOODWARD,
University of Minnesota
Panel on Particle Astrophysics and Gravitation
JACQUELINE N. HEWITT,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Chair
ERIC G. ADELBERGER,
University of Washington
ANDREAS ALBRECHT,
University of California, Davis
ELENA APRILE,
Columbia University
JONATHAN ARONS,
University of California, Berkeley
BARRY C. BARISH,
California Institute of Technology
JOAN CENTRELLA,
NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center
DOUGLAS FINKBEINER,
Harvard University
KATHRYN FLANAGAN,
Space Telescope Science Institute
GABRIELA GONZALEZ,
Louisiana State University
JAMES B. HARTLE,
University of California, Santa Barbara
STEVEN M. KAHN,
Stanford University
N. JEREMY KASDIN,
Princeton University
TERESA MONTARULI,
University of Wisconsin–Madison
ANGELA V. OLINTO,
University of Chicago
RENE A. ONG,
University of California, Los Angeles
HELEN R. QUINN,
Stanford National Accelerator Laboratory (retired)
Panel on Radio, Millimeter, and Submillimeter Astronomy from the Ground
NEAL J. EVANS II,
University of Texas,
Chair
JAMES M. MORAN,
Harvard University,
Vice Chair
CRYSTAL BROGAN,
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
AARON S. EVANS,
University of Virginia
SARAH GIBSON,
National Center for Atmospheric Research, High Altitude Observatory
JASON GLENN,
University of Colorado at Boulder
NICKOLAY Y. GNEDIN,
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
CORNELIA C. LANG,
University of Iowa
MAURA McLAUGHLIN,
West Virginia University
MIGUEL MORALES,
University of Washington
LYMAN A. PAGE, JR.,
Princeton University
JEAN L. TURNER,
University of California, Los Angeles
DAVID J. WILNER,
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Staff
DONALD C. SHAPERO, Director,
Board on Physics and Astronomy (BPA)
MICHAEL H. MOLONEY, Astro2010 Study Director and Director,
Space Studies Board (SSB)
BRANT L. SPONBERG, Associate Director,
SSB (until December 2009)
ROBERT L. RIEMER, Senior Program Officer,
BPA
BRIAN DEWHURST, Program Officer,
ASEB (until July 2009)
JAMES LANCASTER, Program Officer,
BPA
CATHERINE A. GRUBER, Editor,
SSB
CARYN J. KNUTSEN, Research Associate,
BPA
CARMELA CHAMBERLAIN, Administrative Coordinator,
SSB
LaVITA COATES-FOGLE, Senior Program Assistant,
BPA (until October 2009)
BETH DOLAN, Financial Associate,
BPA
COMMITTEE FOR A DECADAL SURVEY OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS
ROGER D. BLANDFORD,
Stanford University,
Chair
MARTHA P. HAYNES,
Cornell University,
Vice Chair
MARCIA J. RIEKE,
University of Arizona,
Vice Chair
LYNNE HILLENBRAND,
California Institute of Technology,
Executive Officer
STEVEN J. BATTEL,
Battel Engineering
LARS BILDSTEN,
University of California, Santa Barbara
JOHN E. CARLSTROM,
University of Chicago
DEBRA M. ELMEGREEN,
Vassar College
JOSHUA FRIEMAN,
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
FIONA A. HARRISON,
California Institute of Technology
TIMOTHY M. HECKMAN,
Johns Hopkins University
ROBERT C. KENNICUTT, JR.,
University of Cambridge
JONATHAN I. LUNINE,
University of Rome, Tor Vergata
CLAIRE E. MAX,
University of California, Santa Cruz
DAN McCAMMON,
University of Wisconsin
STEVEN M. RITZ,
University of California, Santa Cruz
JURI TOOMRE,
University of Colorado
SCOTT D. TREMAINE,
Institute for Advanced Study
MICHAEL S. TURNER,
University of Chicago
NEIL deGRASSE TYSON,
Hayden Planetarium, American Museum of Natural History
PAUL A. VANDEN BOUT,
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
A. THOMAS YOUNG,
Lockheed Martin Corporation (retired)
Staff
DONALD C. SHAPERO, Director,
Board on Physics and Astronomy (BPA)
MICHAEL H. MOLONEY, Astro2010 Study Director and Director,
Space Studies Board (SSB)
BRANT L. SPONBERG, Senior Program Officer,
BPA (until December 2009)
ROBERT L. RIEMER, Senior Program Officer,
BPA
BRIAN D. DEWHURST, Program Officer,
Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board (until July 2009)
JAMES C. LANCASTER, Program Officer,
BPA
DAVID B. LANG, Program Officer,
BPA
TERI THOROWGOOD, Administrative Coordinator,
BPA (from November 2009)
CARMELA CHAMBERLAIN, Administrative Coordinator,
SSB
CATHERINE A. GRUBER, Editor,
SSB
CARYN J. KNUTSEN, Research Associate,
BPA
LaVITA COATES-FOGLE, Senior Program Assistant,
BPA (until October 2009)
BETH DOLAN, Financial Associate,
BPA
BOARD ON PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
ADAM S. BURROWS,
Princeton University,
Chair
PHILIP H. BUCKSBAUM,
Stanford University,
Vice Chair
RICCARDO BETTI,
University of Rochester
PATRICK L. COLESTOCK,
Los Alamos National Laboratory (until June 30, 2010)
JAMES DRAKE,
University of Maryland
JAMES EISENSTEIN,
California Institute of Technology
DEBRA M. ELMEGREEN,
Vassar College
PAUL A. FLEURY,
Yale University
ANDREA M. GHEZ,
University of California, Los Angeles (until June 30, 2010)
PETER F. GREEN,
University of Michigan
LAURA H. GREENE,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
MARTHA P. HAYNES,
Cornell University
JOSEPH HEZIR,
EOP Group, Inc.
MARC A. KASTNER,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Chair until June 30, 2010)
MARK B. KETCHEN,
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
JOSEPH LYKKEN,
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
PIERRE MEYSTRE,
University of Arizona
HOMER A. NEAL,
University of Michigan
MONICA OLVERA de la CRUZ,
Northwestern University
JOSE N. ONUCHIC,
University of California, San Diego
LISA RANDALL,
Harvard University
CHARLES V. SHANK,
Janelia Farm, Howard Hughes Medical Institute (until June 30, 2010)
MICHAEL S. TURNER,
University of Chicago
MICHAEL C.F. WIESCHER,
University of Notre Dame
Staff
DONALD C. SHAPERO, Director
MICHAEL H. MOLONEY, Associate Director (until March 30, 2010)
SPACE STUDIES BOARD
CHARLES F. KENNEL,
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego,
Chair
A. THOMAS YOUNG,
Lockheed Martin Corporation (retired),
Vice Chair
DANIEL N. BAKER,
University of Colorado, Boulder (until June 30, 2010)
STEVEN J. BATTEL,
Battel Engineering
CHARLES L. BENNETT,
Johns Hopkins University (until June 30, 2010)
YVONNE C. BRILL, Aerospace Consultant
ELIZABETH R. CANTWELL,
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
ANDREW B. CHRISTENSEN,
Dixie State College; Aerospace Corporation
ALAN DRESSLER,
Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington
JACK D. FELLOWS,
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
HEIDI B. HAMMEL,
Space Science Institute
FIONA A. HARRISON,
California Institute of Technology
ANTHONY C. JANETOS,
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
JOAN JOHNSON-FREESE,
Naval War College
KLAUS KEIL,
University of Hawaii (until June 30, 2010)
MOLLY K. MACAULEY,
Resources for the Future
BERRIEN MOORE III,
Climate Central (until June 30, 2010)
JOHN F. MUSTARD,
Brown University
ROBERT T. PAPPALARDO,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
JAMES PAWELCZYK,
Pennsylvania State University
SOROOSH SOROOSHIAN,
University of California, Irvine
DAVID N. SPERGEL,
Princeton University
JOAN VERNIKOS,
Thirdage LLC
JOSEPH F. VEVERKA,
Cornell University (until June 30, 2010)
WARREN M. WASHINGTON,
National Center for Atmospheric Research
CHARLES E. WOODWARD,
University of Minnesota
THOMAS H. ZURBUCHEN,
University of Michigan
ELLEN G. ZWEIBEL,
University of Wisconsin (until June 30, 2010)
Staff
MICHAEL H. MOLONEY, Director (from April 2010)
RICHARD E. ROWBERG, Interim Director (from March 2009 through March 2010)
MARCIA S. SMITH, Director (through February 2009)
BRANT L. SPONBERG, Associate Director (until December 2009)
Preface
This volume contains the reports of the five Astro2010 Science Frontiers Panels (SFPs) and the four Astro2010 Program Prioritization Panels (PPPs). These panels were appointed by the National Research Council (NRC) to assist the Committee for a Decadal Survey of Astronomy and Astrophysics in surveying the field of space- and ground-based astronomy and astrophysics and identifying promising areas of research in the coming decade, taking into consideration both new and previously identified concepts. The tasks assigned to the SFPs and PPPs are outlined in Appendix A. This volume also reflects the work of six Infrastructure Study Groups (ISGs) whose members were appointed by the NRC’s Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences to gather and analyze data on issues related to several broad topics. The results of the work of the three groups—the SFPs, PPPs, and ISGs—were advisory to the survey committee, whose task was to recommend priorities for the most important scientific and technical activities in astronomy and astrophysics for the decade 2010-2020.1 The survey committee’s recommendations are presented in a separate volume, New Worlds, New Horizons in Astronomy and Astrophysics (The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C., 2010).
The survey was conducted in two overlapping phases. In the first phase, the five SFPs worked to identify science themes that define the research frontiers for the 2010-2020 decade in five areas: Cosmology and Fundamental Physics, the Galactic Neighborhood, Galaxies Across Cosmic Time, Planetary Systems and Star
Formation, and Stars and Stellar Evolution. Drawing on the 324 white papers on science opportunities submitted to the NRC in response to an open call from the survey committee to the astronomy and astrophysics research community,2 as well as on briefings received from federal agencies that provide support for the field, the SFPs strove to identify the scientific drivers of the field and the most promising opportunities for progress in research in the next decade, taking into consideration those areas where the technical means and the theoretical foundations are in place for major steps forward. The SFPs were instructed to avoid advocacy for prioritization of specific new missions, telescopes, and other research activities. They also worked ahead of and therefore independent of the PPPs. As delineated in Chapters 1 through 5 of this volume, the input of each of the SFPs to the survey committee was organized by four science questions ripe for answering and general areas with unusual discovery potential.
In the second phase of the survey, the PPPs were charged to develop a ranked program of research activities in four programmatic areas: Electromagnetic Observations from Space; Optical and Infrared Astronomy from the Ground; Particle Astrophysics and Gravitation; and Radio, Millimeter, and Submillimeter Astronomy from the Ground. In addition to the draft science questions and discovery areas received from the SFP chairs at a joint meeting held in May 2009, the PPPs also reviewed the more than 100 proposals for research activities presented by the astronomy and astrophysics community for consideration by the survey.3 In addition the PPPs received briefings from federal agencies, project proponents, and other stakeholders at public sessions held in June 2009 at the summer meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Pasadena, California. In their final assembly of priorities the PPPs also took into account assessments of cost and schedule risk, and of the technical readiness of the research activities under consideration for prioritization, that were provided by an NRC-hired contractor, the Aerospace Corporation. As presented in Chapters 6 through 9 of this volume, each PPP report contains a proposed program of prioritized, balanced, and integrated research activities, reflecting the results of its in-depth study of the technical and programmatic issues and its consideration of the results of the independent technical evaluation and cost and schedule risk estimate. The survey committee received draft reports of the PPPs’ input on proposed programs at its fourth committee meeting in October 2009.
The SFPs and the PPPs conducted their work independent of each other, although coordinating calls among the panel chairs were held frequently. No members of the panels served on the survey committee, but the panel chairs did attend
2 |
The set of white papers submitted is available at http://sites.nationalacademies.org/BPA/BPA_050603. |
3 |
For more information see http://sites.nationalacademies.org/BPA/BPA_049855. |
all but the final committee meeting, and liaisons from the committee attended panel meetings.
The six Infrastructure Study Groups that also provided input for the survey committee’s consideration consisted of 71 volunteer consultants drawn for the most part from the astronomy and astrophysics community. These groups gathered and analyzed data on issues in six areas—Computation, Simulation, and Data Handling (including archiving of astronomical data); Demographics (encompassing astronomers and astrophysicists working in different environments and subfields); Facilities, Funding, and Programs (including infrastructure issues such as support for laboratory astrophysics and technology development and theory); International and Private Partnerships; Education and Public Outreach; and Astronomy and Public Policy (benefits to the nation that accrue from federal investment in astronomy and from the potential contributions that professional astronomers can make to research of societal importance, and mechanisms by which the astronomy community provides advice to the federal government)—to describe recent trends and past quantifiable impacts on research programs in astronomy and astrophysics. The ISGs provided preliminary reports to the survey committee and the PPPs at the May 2009 so-called jamboree meeting, and their final reports were completed by the fall of 2009.
It then became the task of the survey committee to integrate the inputs from the SFPs and the PPPs, along with that from the ISGs, into a recommended program for all of astronomy and astrophysics for the decade 2010-2020.
The five SFPs, four PPPs, and six ISGs were critical components of the survey, not only for the content and critical analysis they supplied but also because of the connections they provided to the astronomy and astrophysics community. Moreover the panels completed a Herculean set of tasks in an extraordinarily short time. As presented in this volume, the results of their efforts were essential to the deliberations of the survey committee, the success of whose work depended critically on the sequential and orderly flow of information from the SFPs to the PPPs, and then to the committee as provided for in the survey plan and structure.
In addition, the survey as a whole benefited immensely from the broader participation of the astronomy and astrophysics community, which, over the course of the study and in particular in the first half of 2009, undertook a massive effort to provide input to the survey process. Included were informal reports from 17 community town hall meetings, more than 20 unsolicited e-mails, and 90-plus notices of interest for project activities, in addition to more than 450 white papers on topics including science opportunities, the state of the profession and infrastructure, and opportunities in technology development, theory, computation, and laboratory astrophysics. Critical to the success of the nine panels’ and six study groups’ work, these inputs were also an early product of the survey in that the white papers and various reports were made available on the NRC Web pages. On behalf of the survey
committee and the panels, sincere thanks are extended to the volunteers from the research community who gave so much of their time to formulate this backbone of information and data as input for the Astro2010 survey process.
The survey committee also acknowledges with heartfelt thanks the critical input represented by the material provided in this volume. The reports of the SFPs and the PPPs stand as a testament to the hard work done by the panels, and especially their chairs. The full value of this tremendous effort will be recognized through the decade to come. The survey committee and the entire field of astronomy and astrophysics owe a great deal of thanks to all those who dedicated their time and effort to the Astro2010 survey activities.
Roger D. Blandford, Chair
Committee for a Decadal Survey of Astronomy and Astrophysics
Acknowledgment of Members of the Astro2010 Infrastructure Study Groups
The Committee for a Decadal Survey of Astronomy and Astrophysics acknowledges with gratitude the contributions of the members of the Astro2010 Infrastructure Study Groups, who gathered information on issues related to the broad topics listed below.
Computation, Simulation, and Data Handling: Robert Hanisch, Space Telescope Science Institute, Co-Chair; Lars Hernquist, Harvard University, Co-Chair; Thomas Abel, Stanford University; Keith Arnaud, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Tim Axelrod, LSST; Alyssa Goodman, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Kathryn Johnston, Columbia University; Andrey Kravtsov, University of Chicago; Kristen Larson, Western Washington University; Carol Lonsdale, National Radio Astronomy Observatory; Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, American Museum of Natural History; Michael Norman, University of California, San Diego; Richard Pogge, Ohio State University; and James Stone, Princeton University.
Demographics: James Ulvestad, National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Chair; Jack Gallimore, Bucknell University; Evalyn Gates, University of Chicago; Rachel Ivie, American Institute of Physics; Christine Jones, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Patricia Knezek, WIYN Consortium, Inc.; Travis Metcalfe, National Center for Atmospheric Research; Naveen Reddy, National Optical Astronomy Observatory; Joan Schmelz, University of Memphis; and Louis-Gregory Strolger, Western Kentucky University.
Facilities, Funding, and Programs: J. Craig Wheeler, University of Texas at Austin, Chair; Rebecca A. Bernstein, University of California, Santa Cruz; David Burrows, Pennsylvania State University; Webster Cash, University of Colorado; R. Paul Drake, University of Michigan; Jeremy Goodman, Princeton University; W. Miller Goss, National Radio Astronomy Observatory; Kate Kirby, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Anthony Mezzacappa, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Robert Millis, Lowell Observatory; Catherine Pilachowski, Indiana University; Farid Salama, NASA Ames Research Center; and Ellen Zweibel, University of Wisconsin.
International and Private Partnerships: Robert L. Dickman, National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Chair; Michael Bolte, University of California, Santa Cruz; George Helou, California Institute of Technology; James Hesser, Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics; Wesley T. Huntress, Carnegie Institution of Washington; Richard Kelley, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Rolf-Peter Kudritzki, University of Hawaii; Eugene H. Levy, Rice University; Antonella Nota, Space Telescope Science Institute; and Brad Peterson, Ohio State University.
Education and Public Outreach: Lucy Fortson, Adler Planetarium, Co-Chair; Chris Impey, University of Arizona, Co-Chair; Carol Christian, Space Telescope Science Institute; Lynn Cominsky, Sonoma State University; Mary Dussault, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Richard Tresch Feinberg, Phillips Academy; Andrew Fraknoi, Foothill College; Pamela Gay, Southern Illinois University; Jeffrey Kirsch, Reuben H. Fleet Science Center; Robert Mathieu, University of Wisconsin; George Nelson, Western Washington University; Edward Prather, University of Arizona; Philip Sadler, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Keivan Stassun, Vanderbilt University; and Sidney Woolf, LSST.
Astronomy and Public Policy: Daniel F. Lester, University of Texas at Austin, Chair; Jack Burns, University of Colorado; Bruce Carney, University of North Carolina; Heidi Hammel, Space Science Institute; Noel W. Hinners, Lockheed (retired); John Leibacher, National Solar Observatory; J. Patrick Looney, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Melissa McGrath, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center; and Annelia Sargent, California Institute of Technology.
Acknowledgment of Reviewers
These panel reports have been reviewed in draft form by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise, in accordance with procedures approved by the Report Review Committee of the National Research Council (NRC). The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments that will assist the institution in making the published reports as sound as possible and to ensure that the reports meet institutional standards for objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The review comments and draft manuscripts remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process. We wish to thank the following individuals for their review of these reports:
Science Frontiers Panel Reports
Jonathan Bagger, Johns Hopkins University
Sarbani Basu, Yale University
Timothy Beers, Michigan State University
John H. Black, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Joseph Burns, Cornell University
Len Cowie, University of Hawaii
Marc Davis, University of California, Berkeley
Henry Ferguson, Space Telescope Science Institute
Marla Geha, Yale University
Andrew Gould, Ohio State University
Craig Hogan, University of Chicago
Michael Jura, University of California, Los Angeles
Vicky Kalogera, Northwestern University
Gillian Knapp, Princeton University
Richard McCray, University of Colorado, Boulder
Christopher McKee, University of California, Berkeley
Ramesh Narayan, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Roman Rafikov, Princeton University
Michael Strauss, Princeton University
Ann Wehrle, Space Science Institute
Rainer Weiss, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (professor emeritus)
Bruce Winstein, University of Chicago
Mark Wyatt, University of Cambridge
Program Prioritization Panel Reports
Jonathan Bagger, Johns Hopkins University
James Barrowman, NASA (retired)
John H. Black, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Darrel Emerson, National Radio Astronomy Observatory
Reinhard Genzel, Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics
Ronald L. Gilliland, Space Telescope Science Institute
James E. Gunn, Princeton University Observatory
Craig Hogan, University of Chicago
Vicky Kalogera, Northwestern University
Richard McCray, University of Colorado, Boulder
Christopher McKee, University of California, Berkeley
Ramesh Narayan, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Anthony Readhead, California Institute of Technology
Anneila Sargent, California Institute of Technology
Michael Strauss, Princeton University
Edward L. Wright, University of California, Los Angeles
Although the reviewers listed above have provided many constructive comments and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the reports’ conclusions or recommendations, nor did they see the final draft of the reports before their release. The review of the Science Frontiers Panel reports was overseen by Kenneth H. Keller, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and Bernard F. Burke, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The review of the Program Prioritization Panel reports was overseen by Louis J. Lanzerotti, New Jersey Institute of Technology, and Bernard F. Burke, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Appointed by the NRC, they were responsible for making certain that an indepen-