The Nordic Optical Telescope Scientific Association
The Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT) Scientific Association (NOTSA) was
founded in 1984 to construct and operate a 2.5m Nordic telescope for
observations at optical and infrared wavelengths from the Spanish
Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, Canarias, Spain,
based on a contract signed in 1986 with the Instituto de Canarias
(IAC), Spain.
This page summarises the organisation, history and future plans of
NOTSA. Other pages at this web site
provide contact information and
detailed up-to-date documentation on the
schedule, technical and operational performance
and educational programmes of the telescope.
Governance
NOTSA is governed and funded by the following partners (Associates):
The chief governing body of NOTSA is
the
Council, which sets overall policy
and approves the annual budgets. A
Scientific
and Technical Committee (STC) advises the Council on scientific
and technical policy.
An Observing Programmes Committee (OPC),
appointed by the Council, performs peer review and ranking of the
applications for observing time.
The Director has overall responsibility for the operation of
NOTSA, including financial matters, external relations, and long-term
planning, and organises all matters related to the operation of the
NOT itself on la Palma.
A Short History of NOTSA
A project to build a Nordic Telescope was first proposed in 1980 by Profs.
Bengt Strömgren and
Anders Reiz, who obtained funding for a feasibility study for a
2.5m telescope from the Carlsberg foundation. A feasibility study
by
Torben Andersen was completed in July 1981 and discussed at
the Nordic Astronomy Meetings in November 1981 and February 1982. A
Nordic Optical Telescope Committee was formed in September 1982 and a
revised project study was presented at the end of 1982. Funding for
initial project activities, notably site testing and progress on
detailed design, was provided in early 1983 by the Swedish and Danish
Natural Science Research Councils.
The project became reality in December 1983, when the Nordic Council
of Ministers allocated 8 MSEK to the construction, upon which the four
Nordic research councils (Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden)
approved the remaining 21 MSEK. Thus, the Nordic Optical Telescope
Scientific Association (NOTSA) was founded in January 1984, and
the first Council and Director (Arne Ardeberg, Lund) were
appointed (Iceland joined NOTSA later, in 1997).
Substantial work started in July 1984, when a technical project group
was formed, and the main design features of the NOT were approved in
early 1985. At the same time, it was decided to locate the telescope
at the new observatory site on La Palma. After a number of technical
and financial difficulties had been overcome, the NOT was inaugurated
in 1989, and regular observations started in 1990. The initial years
of operation proved the excellent basic qualities of the telescope and
the site but, as pointed out by an international review panel in 1994,
deficiencies in the instrumentation and insufficient staff for the
operations on La Palma still prevented the telescope from reaching its
full potential.
Under Vilppu Piirola (Turku), who took over as Director in
1995, the budget and operations of NOTSA were thoroughly reorganised
with a focus on the scientific output. An adequate scientific and
technical staff on La Palma was recruited, headed by an experienced
Astronomer-in-Charge, Hugo Schwarz, and an ambitious,
systematic programme brought the NOT operations up to international
standards. At the same time, the Associates funded a joint programme
to equip the telescope with a versatile set of state-of-the-art
optical and near-infrared
workhorse instruments. As
a result, the scientific interest in and reputation of the NOT
increased steadily, as reflected in the annual lists
of publications based on NOT
data. A far-sighted step in this period was to join the EU-funded
Infrastructure Coordination
Network OPTICON, which
involved the NOT - and Nordic astronomy in general - in the
initiatives to promote greater synergy and coordination in European
ground-based astronomy.
The NOT was thus already a well-established, successful operation in
2002, when Johannes Andersen and Thomas Augusteijn became
Director and Astronomer-in-Charge (later Deputy Director). Gradual
instrumentation upgrades continued (new detectors; a stable location
for the high-resolution spectrograph
FIES), and financial reserves also made it possible to overhaul
and completely renew the telescope control and cooling systems,
securing continued operation for another couple of decades. In
parallel, a sustained programme was pursued to document and streamline
telescope, instrument and data flow operations so as to improve the
efficiency, flexibility and reliability of the operations and the
short- and long-term scientific value of the data. Notable scientific
results include long-term monitoring of active stars and rapid
response to events in the emerging fields of Gamma-Ray Bursts and
exoplanets (for more detail, see the Annual
Reports and lists of
publications). A programme of training activities, including an expanded
Research Student programme, was also
developed. At the end of September 2013 Johannes Andersen retired,
and Thomas Augusteijn was appointed Director as of October 1st,
2013.
The Future: A European Facility
The original concept for the NOT was an independent, general facility
for observational projects by Nordic astronomers. The scientific and
organisational context in which it operates today is vastly different
from that of 1990: Finland has
joined
ESO (along with UK, Spain and
several other countries), and a new generation of European (even
global) mega-facilities at optical, infrared and radio wavelengths
dominates the scene. Smaller telescopes, such as the NOT, must
specialise and coordinate their operations at the European level in
order to be scientifically and financially competitive.
This philosophy underlies
the ASTRONET consortium,
which was formed in 2005 by all the largest funding agencies for
European astronomy, with EU support. Its goal is to prepare a
science-based plan for the coordinated development of all of
European astronomy - at all wavelengths, from the ground and in space,
and including the crucial human resources. In extension of its
membership in
OPTICON, NOTSA has played
a very active role in
ASTRONET and contributed
significantly to the development of a new operational paradigm for the
European 2-4m telescopes.
Thus, we see the future of the NOT as a specialised tool in the
panoply of facilities available to European astronomy, focused on
scientific fields where it can optimally serve the best Nordic and
European science teams, and in concert with telescopes offering
complementary capabilities. To this end, we plan to equip it with a
single new, permanent focal-plane instrument, offering optical and NIR
imaging and spectroscopy and modelled on the highly successful
X-shooter
at the
ESO Very Large Telescope
(VLT). With FIES upgraded to yield
high-precision spectropolarimetry and also permanently available, this
will make the NOT a powerful tool for studying a wide range of
transient and variable astrophysical sources in the coming decade.