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ROSAT - an acronym for the German word Röntgensatellit - is a joint
German, US and British space project. ROSAT provides a three-axes
stabilized satellite in low Earth orbit carrying an imaging X-ray
telescope (XRT) and an XUV telescope (WFC) covering the wave band
between 700 and 6 Å. The ROSAT observatory has a nominal operation
lifetime of 18 months. At the time of this writing, 8 months after
launch, ROSAT has already completed 2 months of checkout and 6 months
of an all-sky survey in the X-ray and XUV wavebands. It will now
begin detailed studies of individual sources
with respect to spatial structure, temporal variability, and spectral
properties performed by guest investigators in the pointed
observing mode. The anticipated lifetime of the satellite
is longer than the nominal lifetime, providing the possibility of
carrying on an extended observing program.
This document contains all the technical information required for the
preparation of ROSAT observing proposals for the second scheduling period
of pointed observations (AO2).
The following points might be of interest to potential guest observers:
- Proposals for ROSAT guest observations are for the pointed mode
only.
- The pointed observing time is shared among the three
national programs participating in ROSAT: Germany, United
States, and United Kingdom.
- Scientists with home institutions in Germany, the United States, or
the United Kingdom must apply for observing time only at their
respective national agencies (BMFT, NASA, SERC); scientists from
other countries may submit proposals to any (but only one) of the
three national agencies participating in the ROSAT project.
- Proposals submitted by the proposal deadline are for the second six
months of pointed ROSAT observations after completion of the
all-sky survey.
- Proposals submitted after the initial due date will be evaluated at
six-month intervals for subsequent six-month observing seasons.
In the initial baseline mission one year of pointed observations
is available, however there may be a mission extension.
- All pointed observations will have simultaneous XRT and WFC observations.
- All guest investigators will have proprietary data rights to the XRT
data (PSPC or HRI) taken in their pointed program. UK and German
observers will have proprietary data rights to the WFC data taken in
their national program.
- Proprietary rights to WFC data taken simultaneously with XRT data
arising from proposals submitted through NASA will belong to German
or British investigators who are named in advance of the observations in
order to provide the possibility for collaborative arrangements.
- Guest Observers have proprietary data rights for a period of 12 months
after the data have been made available in a form suitable for
scientific analysis.
- All nominal ROSAT operations will be preplanned and
no real time observatory access is available.
Proposals must contain all the information specified on the forms provided
in this document (see Chapter 9 for information and
instructions). Unless other arrangements have been made within the
respective national program
(see national cover letter), this means that proposals must be
submitted on a copy of these forms. Particular attention should
be paid to the estimation of the feasibility of the proposed
observations (see Chapters 10 , 11,
and 12 of this document).
Next: THE ROSAT MISSION: OVERVIEW
Up: Appendix F
Previous: List of Tables
Michael Arida
Tue Jun 11 16:18:41 EDT 1996