论文标题
2020年代及以后的多理智瞬态观察的国际协调:Kavli-iau白皮书
International Coordination of Multi-Messenger Transient Observations in the 2020s and Beyond: Kavli-IAU White Paper
论文作者
论文摘要
This White Paper summarizes the discussions from a five-day workshop, involving 50 people from 18 countries, held in Cape Town, South Africa in February 2020. Convened by the International Astronomical Union's Executive Committee Working Group on Global Coordination of Ground and Space Astrophysics and sponsored by the Kavli Foundation, we discussed existing and potential bottlenecks for transient and multi-messenger astronomy, identifying eight broad areas of concern.其中一些与许多天文学家所面临的挑战非常相似,例如,数据访问政策,资金,理论和计算资源以及劳动力股权。其他人,包括警报,望远镜协调和开放性的目标实施,与时域密切相关,并且在我们响应瞬变时尤其具有挑战性。为了解决这些瓶颈,我们提供了35个具体建议,其中一些只是起点,需要开发。这些建议不仅针对协作团体和个人,而且针对各种组织,这些组织对于使短暂的合作有效而有效至关重要:包括国际天文学联盟,观测站,项目,科学期刊和资助机构。我们希望那些参与暂时研究的人能够找到建设性,并利用它们来开发具有更大影响力和更具包容性团队的合作。
This White Paper summarizes the discussions from a five-day workshop, involving 50 people from 18 countries, held in Cape Town, South Africa in February 2020. Convened by the International Astronomical Union's Executive Committee Working Group on Global Coordination of Ground and Space Astrophysics and sponsored by the Kavli Foundation, we discussed existing and potential bottlenecks for transient and multi-messenger astronomy, identifying eight broad areas of concern. Some of these are very similar to the challenges faced by many astronomers engaging in international collaboration, for example, data access policies, funding, theoretical and computational resources and workforce equity. Others, including, alerts, telescope coordination and target-of-opportunity implementation, are strongly linked to the time domain and are particularly challenging as we respond to transients. To address these bottlenecks we offer thirty-five specific recommendations, some of which are simply starting points and require development. These recommendations are not only aimed at collaborative groups and individuals, but also at the various organizations who are essential to making transient collaborations efficient and effective: including the International Astronomical Union, observatories, projects, scientific journals and funding agencies. We hope those involved in transient research will find them constructive and use them to develop collaborations with greater impact and more inclusive teams.