1 / 10

NSF/AST Program Update

This update provides information on budgets, the status of interagency projects, and the impact of the continuing resolution on AST observatories. It also highlights the accomplishments of the ALMA project.

Download Presentation

NSF/AST Program Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NSF/AST Program Update AAAC Meeting October 14-15, 2008 Craig Foltz, Acting Director, AST

  2. Outline • Budgets • Status of Interagency Projects • ALMA Update

  3. Budgets • Continuing Resolution at FY 2008 levels through March, 2009. • Budget Office (NSF) has allocated 90% of FY 2008 levels for funding. • Impacts our funding strategy and observatories’ cash flow. • Observatories and Managing Organizations have been informed. Their input is currently being analyzed. • Nothing to share with respect to FY 2010 at this time.

  4. Impact of CR on AST Observatories • AST Senior Review (2006) made specific recommendations with respect to facilities’ futures: • NAIC reductions • Endorsement of ATST • Endorsement of ALMA • Recommendation of infrastructure investment at NOAO. • ALMA early operations costs began in FY 2006 and are growing, to be partially offset by reductions in NRAO base, but total is increasing. • Observatories’ M&O has been flat-funded since FY2006. (with full-year CR, that’s four years of flat funding)

  5. Gemini increase was for Aspen Instrumentation Program and 2.5% increase in M&O. NRAO increase in 2008 is early ALMA ops.

  6. Other Factors • ATST D&D costs have increased as the project approaches a possible construction start: • Environmental/cultural compliance cost now >$2.5M • Anticipate additional $1.5M for National Park’s NEPA compliance • Cost of Final Design Review ~$100k • Ramping up of staff to prepare for construction. • Funding is essentially capped at FY2006 level and will be ~$1.3M short in FY 2009. • In response to SR, NOAO has planned for infrastructure improvements at CTIO and KPNO. • In response to SR, AST COV, etc., AST has not reduced funding of individual investigator awards program. • Inflation is non-zero. Absent other issues, effectively a ~12% cut. • Other stresses: Chilean inflation, fuel and utility costs, etc.

  7. The Impacts • NAIC reductions resulted in a 25% reduction in staff (24 FTE: 19 layoffs, 5 retrenchments). • Planning for even the possibility of a year-long CR will result in reductions in force, furloughs, facility shut-downs, etc. • Additional cuts applied mid-year cannot be accommodated by additional lay-offs due to severance packages, nor can they be substantially offset by facility closure. • As a result, observatories have begun planning for layoffs, early retirements, retrenchments to be carried out early in FY 2009.

  8. Interagency Projects • Virtual Astronomical Observatory • Solicitation issued on time • Under joint review with NASA • Mutually committed to fund the VAO. • Dark Energy Survey • Very well coordinated with DOE HEP • AST provided funding for initial phase of data-processing pipeline. • Blanco telescope improvements initiated but may lag due to availability of funds. • Sloan III • Joint DOE/NSF/Sloan project • AST made new award in FY 2008 • DOE HEP funded year one. • Jointly coordinated with DOE • LSST • Joint PDR planned for Spring 2009

  9. ALMA Project Status • Overall construction cost performance is good (CPI~1.0) but slightly behind schedule (SPI~0.95) • Contingency is healthy • Recent accomplishments include: • High-site technical building accepted • Mid-level labs and offices accepted • 11 antennas in Chile (4 Japan, 7 North America/Vertex) • Vertex antenna deliveries to Chile at pace of 1 every 2 months • Antenna transporters accepted • First front- and back-end electronics system accepted • Astronomical spectra taken with prototype antennas

  10. ALMA Project Accomplishments • In pictures…

More Related