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<TITLE>The Network of Oriental Robotic Telescopes - (NORT)</TITLE>
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<H1>The Network of Oriental Robotic Telescopes<br>(NORT)</H1>
<H2>Fran&#231;ois R. Querci &amp; Monique Querci</H2>
<i>Observatoire Midi-Pyr&#233;n&#233;es, 14, Av. E. Belin, Toulouse, France<br>
<a href="mailto:querci@obs-mip.fr">querci@obs-mip.fr</a></i>
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<B>Abstract</B>. Generally speaking, variable stars are 
monitored through multi-site
observing campaigns which coordinate telescopes at various
longitudes. A new practice is to use networks of
robotic telescopes devoted to these programmes. 
In the first issue of <I>African Skies/Cieux Africains</I> we 
discussed the advantages and drawbacks of such campaigns.
In this issue we 
describe the NORT (Network of Oriental Robotic Telescopes) project
which we are promoting in North African and Middle-Eastern countries.<BR>
<P>
<B>Sommaire</B>. G&#233;n&#233;ralement, des campagnes d'observation mettant en jeu des t&#233;lescopes r&#233;partis sur plusieurs sites de diff&#233;rentes longitudes sont organis&#233;es pour observer les &#233;toiles variables. Une nouvelle technologie se d&#233;veloppe; il s
'agit de r&#233;seaux consacr&#233;s &#224; l'observation des &#233;toiles variables et impliquant des t&#233;lescopes automatis&#233;s.
Dans le premier num&#233;ro de <I>African Skies/Cieux Africains</I> nous avons 
discut&#233; les avantages et les inconv&#233;nients des campagnes. Dans ce num&#233;ro nous d&#233;crirons le NORT (R&#233;seau de T&#233;lescopes Robotis&#233;s en Pays d'Orient) que nous promouvons en Afrique du Nord
 et dans les Pays d'Orient.<BR>
<P>
(This paper is updated from the Proceedings of IAU Symposium 177 on
``<I>The Carbon Star Phenomenon</I>,'' held on May 27-31, 1996, in Antalya, Turkey;
editor: Robert F. Wing; to be published by Kluwer).
<P>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00010000000000000000">1. Introduction</A></H1>
<P>
Global networks of automated telescopes (GNATs) were proposed by Budding
(1993, 1995), Crawford (1992, 1993, 1995), Querci and Querci (1991),
Querci et al. (1993, 1995a,b) and Querci (1995).
Here we would like to describe the philosophy of the NORT project, which
is a network of 1.5- to 2.0-m automated telescopes for photometric and
spectrographic research dedicated to variable stars, and which are to be installed at high-altitude desert sites from Morocco to China.
<P>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00020000000000000000">2. Framework of the Project</A></H1>
<P>
The NORT will mainly
deal with variable objects such as red giants, planetary nebulae and
post-novae, to stimulate asteroseismology of long-period variables and to
contribute to progress in our understanding of these objects.
Examples of scientific objectives for robotic telescopes are given in Querci and Querci
(1997a).
<P>
As various characteristic times of variation have to be searched for,
continuous monitoring of selected typical objects is required. This requirement 
can only be satisfied through having telescopes at the ``best'' sites, 
<I>i.e.</I> semi-desert countries, around the world.
<P>
A number of such countries lie along the tropic of Cancer, from Morocco to
the Chinese deserts. The longitude
interval they cover is complementary to that covered by the USA, where
robotic telescopes already exist. Although a number of these oriental
countries had great astronomers in the past, 
few are now actively participating in astrophysical research.
 However, their universities, their sites (high mountains in semi-desert 
climate) and their desire for 
development can provide strong support for progress in astrophysics.
<P>
<center><img src="querci1.gif" alt="Mean annual nebulosity" width=561 height=300 border=0><br>
<STRONG>Figure 1:</STRONG> Mean annual nebulosity obtained with meteorological 
 satellites: - white: nebulosity&lt;30%, - black: nebulosity&gt;70%, 
  - 1st level of grey: 30% to 40%, - 2nd level of grey: 40% to 50%, 
 - 3rd level of grey: 50% to 60%, - 4th level of grey: 60% to 70% 
 (from Querci and Querci, 1997b).</center>
<P>
<P>
In the NORT project, we propose :
<UL><LI> to collaborate in astronomy and astrophysics education,<LI> to help in 
the development of research laboratories and student observatories within the university context,<LI> to promote training of engineers and technicians
in the French observatories such as 
Haute-Provence Observatory (OHP), Midi-Pyr&#233;n&#233;es Observatory (OMP), 
<EM>etc.</EM>, and<LI> to collaborate in setting up the network and in the scientific 
choice of the objects to be observed.
</UL>
<P>
All the equipment will be fully robotic.
Each day, all the collected observations will be transmitted directly to 
all the universities and members of the network <I>via</I>  the Internet
and/or ARABSAT. 
The data reduction and interpretation could be done jointly, thus further 
promoting shared scientific and technical progress.
<P>
This network is supported by :
<UL>
<LI> MENRT (French Ministry of National Education, Research and Technology),
<LI> UN Office for Outer Space Affairs,
<LI> some developing countries (see &#167;6.3 below).
</UL>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00030000000000000000">3. Why Sites in these Countries?</A></H1>
<P>
The oriental countries are suitable because 
 they have high mountains (3000 - 4000&nbsp;m) in semi-desert
areas (north-tropical latitude from 15&#176; to 35&#176; ), and consequently
a large number of nights each year with a clear sky and low telluric
absorption.
Furthermore, these countries are in a longitude interval (about 10&#176; West to 110&#176; East)
complementary to some automated stations already devoted to variable
star research at sites in Hawaii, Arizona, Chile, 
Italy, and South Africa.
<P>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00040000000000000000">4. How to Select the Good Sites?</A></H1>
<P>
In using 12-year archives of METEOSAT and NOAA data, we
discovered
a set of meteorologically  very good sites (Figure 1) from Morocco to the 
Taklamakan and
Gobi deserts in China. The selected sites should ideally be subjected to
different airstreams. 
The pre-selected sites for the NORT project are shown in Figure 2. In order of increasing longitude they are: the High Atlas in Morocco,
 Hoggar in Algeria, Sina&#239; in Egypt, northern Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, Iran,
 northern Pakistan, India and western China.<BR>
<P>
The final site selection will be based on local astronomical tests such as 
seeing measurements. 
A minimum number of stations should be able to follow the
variable stars 
each night, without interruption, throughout the year.
 Also, the accessibility of  these sites 
will evidently be a significant factor in the selection (Querci and Querci, 1997b).
<P>
<center><img src="querci2.gif" alt="Potential NORT sites" width=580 height=300 border=0><br>
<STRONG>Figure 2:</STRONG> Potential sites for the NORT, pre-selected from geographical
 and meteorological parameters (from Querci and Querci, 1997b).</center>
<P><H1><A NAME="SECTION00050000000000000000">5. Observational Techniques</A></H1>
<P>
We propose an outline for a decade of collaboration on variable star
research as follows:<BR> 
- firstly, by obtaining time-series photometry, which measures the stellar 
flux variation at specific wavelengths and leads to knowledge of
 the evolution and the internal structure of the stars,<BR> 
- later, by spectrography which, in its low resolution modes, yields the
stellar abundance variations, and, in its high resolution modes, is able
to give the physical parameters of the stars and their dynamical
behaviour,<BR> 
- and, finally, by interferometry at visible wavelengths to obtain the
diameter variations of the stars and detailed descriptions of
their external layers. There exists also the possibility of the 
serendipitous discovery of extra-solar planets through the use of this
technique.
<P>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00060000000000000000">6. Present Status of the Project</A></H1>
<P>
<H2><A NAME="SECTION00061000000000000000">6.1 Training and Scientific Aspects</A></H2>
<P>
A French committee was created within the CNRS in October 1994 to
deal with the educational aspects of the project. Doctoral students are jointly
 supervised by the student's home institute and this committee. The committee comprises
8 members who are  professors in astronomy and 
astrophysics, astrophysicists specializing in
instrumentation, and theoretical astrophysicists specializing in stellar variability.
The technical training courses have already been held at OHP.
PhD theses of North African and  Middle-Eastern students are in progress on stellar variability of various
 spectral-type stars. The students are sponsored by grants from 
their home institutions or French Embassies.
<P>
<H2><A NAME="SECTION00062000000000000000">6.2 Technical Aspects</A></H2>
<P>
Many 60-cm diameter telescopes dedicated to the training of students from 
Universities and youth science clubs are currently in operation in these
countries.
Furthermore, the mechanical structure calculations of 1.5- to 
2.0-m diameter scientific telescopes for the NORT project have been completed at OMP.
<P>
<H2><A NAME="SECTION00063000000000000000">6.3 International Relationships</A></H2>
<P>
During the ``First International Conference on Space and
Astronomy'' held in Amman, Hachemite Kingdom of Jordan, in September
1994, scientific discussions took place between astronomers from (by longitude):
Morocco, France, Libya, Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, and Yemen, on the astrophysical research projects that should be done with networks.<BR> 
The Second Arab Astronomical Conference, also held in Amman in September
1997, included the NORT project in its recommendations: <I>``Supporting Prof. Fran&#231;ois Querci's proposition concerning the NORT activities in the Arab World, which aims at increasing scientific and technological cooperation with this network.&quot;</I>
<P>
Contacts are in progress with numerous countries, among them with the following African ones (by
longitude): Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Egypt. If 
scientists from other African countries are interested, they  are welcome to
participate.<BR>
<P>
This project was endorsed by the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful
Uses of Outer Space, at its General Assembly in December 1996 following the sixth UN/ESA Workshop on Basic Space Science: <I>Ground-based and Space-borne Astronomy</I> (Bonn, Germany, 9-13 September 1996,  Kluwer Publ.).
<P>
<H1><A NAME="SECTION00070000000000000000">7. Concluding Remarks</A></H1>
<P>
We had this idea of a Network of Oriental Robotic Telescopes some years
ago. We told our Moroccan colleagues about it and one of us (F.Q.)
visited some oriental countries.
If the project succeeds, as we hope it will, it should allow several oriental
countries to leapfrog into contemporary
astrophysics through the pursuit of progressive scientific development and research, as emphasized by Querci and Querci (1997a).
<P>
We should like to emphasize the fact that long-term
monitoring of variable stars through global automated dedicated networks
has implications for a ``new field of astronomy - astroeconomics,'' according to
Budding (1995) and Crawford (1995).
Owing to scheduling and other constraints at major observatories,
 current multi-site campaigns
 allow intensive monitoring of variable stars for a very limited period -
usually one to two weeks per annum. A number of asteroseismology space
missions are planned which will allow dedicated monitoring over much longer
periods. However, the small aperture of these spaceborne telescopes and the
limited mission lifetime (typically a few years), means that the benefits
of such missions will be limited. Global networks  of automatic telescopes
will therefore play an increasingly important role in the exploration
of the exciting astrophysical domain of time-variable phenomena.
<P>
Finally, by detecting the critical phases of variability of the studied 
objects through permanent follow-up, the networks  will promote a new 
type of collaboration with the large-scale facilities (<I>e.g.</I> very
large optical/IR telescopes, long-baseline interferometers, or the Hubble 
Space Telescope) required at these critical phases. In this way networks
of small and medium sized telescopes may be used to initiate astronomically developing
countries into the very sophisticated and expensive technologies used at
international large-scale facilities.
<P>
 <P><A NAME="SECTIONREF"><H2>References</H2></A><P>
<DL COMPACT>
<DT><STRONG>1</STRONG><DD>
Budding, E. 1993, in IAU Colloquium 136: <I>Stellar Photometry - Current
  Techniques and Future Developments</I>, eds. C. J. Butler and I. Elliott
  (Cambridge Univ. Press), p. 257.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>2</STRONG><DD>
Budding, E. 1995, <I>Astrophys. and Space Sci.</I>, 228, 299.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>3</STRONG><DD>
Crawford, D. L. 1992, <I>Astron. Soc. Pacific Conf. Ser.</I>, 28,
  p. 123.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>4</STRONG><DD>
Crawford, D. L. 1993, in IAU Colloquium 136: <I>Stellar Photometry -
  Current Techniques and Future Developments</I>, eds. C. J. Butler and 
  I. Elliott (Cambridge Univ. Press), p. 244.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>5</STRONG><DD>
Crawford, D. L. 1995, in <I>Robotic Observatories</I>, ed. M. F. Bode
  (John Wiley &amp; Sons and Praxis Publ.), p. 77.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>6</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R. and Querci, M. 1991, in Joint Commission 9 and 25 Meeting:
  <I>Automated Telescopes for Photometry and Imaging</I>, XXIst IAU
  General Assembly, Buenos Aires (Argentina), 23 July-1st August 1991,
  eds. S. J. Adelman and R. J. Dukes, Highlights of Astronomy, Vol. 9,
  (Kluwer).
<P>
<DT><STRONG>7</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R., Querci, M., Kadiri, S. and de Rancourt, L. 1993, in IAU
  Colloquium 136: <I>Stellar Photometry</I>, eds. E. Elliott and C. J.
  Butler (Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies), p. 122.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>8</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R. 1995, in IAU Working Group for the Worldwide Development
  of Astronomy: <I>Problems of Astronomy in Africa</I>, ed. I.
  Appenzeller (Kluwer), Highlights of Astronomy, Vol. 10, p. 665.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>9</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R., Querci, M., Kadiri, S. and Benkhaldoun, Z. 1995a, in
  Symposium: <I>Robotic Telescopes: Current Capabilities, Present
  Developments, and Future Prospects for Automated Astronomy</I>, held
  in Flagstaff (Arizona), June 28-30, 1994, eds. G.W. Henry and M.
  Drummond, ASP Conf. Ser., Vol. 79.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>10</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R., Querci, M. and Kadiri, S. 1995b, in Workshop: <I>Robotic
  Observatories</I>, held in Kilkenny (Ireland), 29-31 July, 1992, eds.
  B. P. Hines and M. F. Bode (Praxis and John Wiley and Sons
  Publishing), p. 85.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>11</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R., Querci, M.  1997a, in 23rd IAU General Assembly (Kyoto, Japan), Joint Discussion 20; <I>Enhancing Astronomical Research and Education in Developing Countries</I>. to appear in I.A.P.P.P. Communications, ed. Dr. Terry D. Oswalt, in press.
<P>
<DT><STRONG>12</STRONG><DD>
Querci, F. R., Querci, M.  1997b, in 23rd IAU General Assembly (Kyoto, Japan), Commission 50: <I>Protection of Existing and Potential Observatory Sites</I>, to appear in P. A. S. P., in press.
</DL>
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<P><ADDRESS>
<I>Working Group <BR>
Mon Apr 27 00:40:00 GMT+0200 1998</I>
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