GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review | Page 3

Markus Kissler-Patig Director’s Message 2013: A Successful Year for Gemini! As 2013 comes to an end, we can look back at 12 very successful months for Gemini despite strong budget constraints. Indeed, 2013 was the first stage of our three-year transition to a reduced operations budget, and it was marked by a roughly 20 percent cut in contributions from Gemini’s partner countries. Nevertheless, our staff excelled at working on the many initiatives that will allow us to operate Gemini in a sustainable way, while providing most of the services that our users appreciate. We also managed to deliver to the Gemini community three new exciting instruments at Gemini South, as well as host two visiting instruments at Gemini North. In addition, we launched the new Large and Long Programs, complementing the standard semester-based method of administering telescope time. Gains at Gemini South With four facility-class instruments and an adaptive optics system, Gemini South is now configured as it will operate for the next few years. First, the Gemini Multi-conjugate adaptive optics System (GeMS) with the Gemini South Adaptive Optics Imager (GSAOI) was introduced early in the year with first science. The system moved into regular operations soon thereafter. This complex system will still require a few more semesters of operations until it runs as smoothly as some of the old workhorse instruments, but the first papers based on its data have appeared, and the instrument is heavily subscribed. Second, FLAMINGOS-2 was commissioned in imaging- and long-slit modes during the first half of the year. It jumped immediately to the next-most demanded instrument behind the two Gemini Multi-Object Spectrographs. We anticipate that the remaining image-quality problems can be solved in 2014, after which we will add the much anticipated near-infrared Multi-Object Spectrograph mode. January2014 2013 Year in Review GeminiFocus 1