Development Plans for the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)
Christine Wilson (1), Scott Chapman (2), Ruobing Dong (3), James di, Francesco (4), Laura Fissel (5), Doug Johnstone (4), Helen Kirk (4), Brenda, Matthews (3,4), Brian McNamara (6), Erik Rosolowsky (7), Michael Rupen (4),, Sarah Sadavoy (5), Douglas Scott (8)

TL;DR
ALMA has proven to be a highly impactful observatory over the past decade, with strong Canadian involvement in research, training, and collaboration, supporting continued participation and future development.
Contribution
This paper reviews Canada's successful decade-long participation in ALMA and outlines strategies for maintaining leadership, training, and involvement in future ALMA developments.
Findings
Canadian researchers lead many first-author papers using ALMA
ALMA has high scientific impact across multiple fields
Canadian involvement has been crucial for training and collaboration
Abstract
(abridged) The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) was the top-ranked priority for a new ground-based facility in the 2000 Canadian Long Range Plan. Ten years later, at the time of LRP2010, ALMA construction was well underway, with first science observations anticipated for 2011. In the past 8 years, ALMA has proved itself to be a high-impact, high-demand observatory, with record numbers of proposals submitted to the annual calls and large numbers of highly cited scientific papers across fields from protoplanetary disks to high-redshift galaxies and quasars. The LRP2010 ALMA white paper laid out 8 specific metrics that could be used to judge the success of Canada's participation in ALMA. Among these metrics were publications (number; impact), collaborations (international; multi-wavelength), and student training. To call out one particular metric, Canadians are making…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeography and Environmental Studies in Latin America
