Hubble Space Telescope Call for Proposals for Cycle 11 | ||||
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6.1 How STScI Evaluates Submitted Proposals
HST Programs are selected through competitive peer review. A broad range of scientists from the international astronomical community evaluates all submitted proposals, using a well-defined set of criteria (see Section 6.2). They rank the proposals and offer their recommendations to the STScI Director. Based on these recommendations, the STScI Director makes the final allocation of observing time.
6.1.1 The Review Panels
Review panels will consider Regular GO (fewer than 100 orbits; see Section 3.2.1), SNAP, AR and Theory proposals. Each review panel can recommend Regular GO proposals up to a certain limited number of orbits that it has been allocated. In order to encourage the acceptance of sizable proposals, a progressive orbit "subsidy" is allocated to the panels, with orbits in the subsidy coming from outside the direct panel allotment. The algorithm for this "subsidy" has the goal of creating an acceptance rate of submitted programs that is approximately independent of size.
The panel recommendations generally do not require further approval of the TAC (see Section 6.1.2) and scientific balance will be determined within each panel rather than by the TAC. The panels do not decide on Large GO proposals (100 orbits or more; see Section 3.2.2), Treasury GO proposals (see Section 3.2.4) or AR Legacy proposals (see Section 3.4.2), but they will send their comments on these proposals to the TAC for their consideration.
Panelists are chosen based on their expertise in one or more of the areas under review by the panel. Each panel spans several scientific categories (as defined in Section 8.3). For example, in Cycle 10 there were two panels dealing primarily with Hot Stars, ISM and Circumstellar Medium; two panels dealing primarily with Star Formation, Cool Stars and Stellar Populations; two panels dealing primarily with Galaxies, AGN and Quasars; two panels dealing primarily with Quasar Absorption Lines and Cosmology; and one panel dealing with the Solar System. The division of scientific categories over panels may be different in Cycle 11, but the breadth of the panels will remain similar.
Given the breadth of the panels, proposers should frame their scientific justification in terms appropriate for a panel with a broad range of astronomical expertise.
6.1.2 The Telescope Allocation Committee (TAC)
The TAC will be composed of a TAC chair, the panel chairs, and possibly a small number of other members of the international scientific community. The primary responsibility of the TAC is to review the Large GO proposals (100 orbits or more; see Section 3.2.2), Treasury GO proposals (see Section 3.2.4), AR Legacy proposals (see Section 3.4.2), and any other particularly large requests of resources (SNAP, AR, Theory or pure parallel). It will also be the arbiter of any extraordinary or cross-panel issues.
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