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Science Workshop for a10-meter Submillimeter-wave Telescope at South PoleHarvard University Science Center28 March 1997A ten-meter diameter submillimeter-wave telescope will be proposed to the Office of Polar Programs in May 1997 by a consortium including the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, the Max-Planck Institute for Radioastronomy, the California Institute of Technology, the University of Arizona, the University of Cologne, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Chicago. The telescope will be constructed at the National Science Foundation Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station. This instrument will be available on a proposal basis, and will accommodate large focal-plane arrays and CMBR instruments at wavelengths between 200 microns and 6 mm. The workshop is a forum for discussion of plans and solicitation of ideas from all astronomers. Participants will organize into science goal working groups. The workshop meeting has a threefold purpose:
Agenda: Friday, 28 March 1997, 9 AM to 5 PM
The Workshop was held on Friday, 28 March 1997, 9 AM to 5 PM, at the Harvard University Science Center at One Oxford Street, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Science Center is 300 meters NNE of the Harvard Square "T" stop on the Boston subway Red line, just east of the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Cambridge Street. The Science Center is a large, modern building with astronomical domes on top and a modernistic fountain in front. From Harvard Square, walk NE across Harvard Yard and the pedestrian overpass over Cambridge Street. From the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, walk east one mile along Concord Avenue, cross Cambridge Common and Massachusetts Avenue to Cambridge Street. You can take the Boston "T" subway from Logan Airport, the Amtrack South Station, or the Alewife parking garage at the intersection of Highway 2 and Highway 16. A taxi from Logan Airport to Harvard Square costs about $23. Parking in the Harvard Square area is difficult. There is a commercial garage on Eliot Street, near the intersection with JFK Street (formerly Boylston St.), which is within walking distance of the Science Center. If you park in a "Resident Sticker" parking spot, you will probably receive a $20 fine. The Eighth International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology was held in the Harvard Science Center on March 25-27, just prior to the 10 meter Science Workshop. Contact Ray Blundell (rblundell@cfa.harvard.edu) or Edward Tong (etong@cfa.harvard.edu).
Dr. Antony A. Stark
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