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The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science will support Rubin Observatory in its operations phase to carry out the Legacy Survey of Space and Time. They will also provide support for scientific research with the data. During operations, NSF funding is managed by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with NSF, and DOE funding is managed by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC), under contract by DOE. Rubin Observatory is operated by NSF NOIRLab and SLAC.

NSF is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950 to promote the progress of science. NSF supports basic research and people to create knowledge that transforms the future.

The DOE Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

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  3. Rubin First Look Watch Parties

Rubin First Look Watch Parties

About Rubin First Look Watch Parties

The release of the first images from NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory is right around the corner. This will mark the beginning of a new era in astronomy, and we invite you to take part.

Rubin First Look Watch Parties are expected to take place at partner institutions, planetariums, museums, libraries, universities, and other organizations in the U.S., Chile, and around the world.

The core of the Watch Parties will be the First Look unveiling event, which is expected for June or July of this year and will be streamed live to Watch Party venues.

About the Rubin First Look Unveiling Event

The Rubin First Look unveiling event is the primary feature of Rubin First Look Watch Parties and will include the unveiling of the Rubin First Look images. The date, time, and location of this event are still being determined. This page will be updated as details become available. A link to live stream this event will be sent to all Watch Parties.

Local adaptations are welcome but optional — local language, scientists, dignitaries, media, planetarium shows, photo exhibitions, guided tours, star parties, hands-on activities, talks, etc. The sky’s the limit!

More information

NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science (DOE/SC). Rubin Observatory is a Program of NSF NOIRLab, which, along with SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, will jointly operate Rubin.

Join a Rubin Watch Party near you

For Organizers

Why host a Rubin First Look Watch Party?

The Rubin First Look Watch Parties will be a worldwide event to celebrate the release of Rubin Observatory’s First Look images. Organizers who sign up will receive access to materials and information for hosting a Rubin First Look Watch Party at their venue. Material packages include access to the Rubin First Look unveiling event live stream, a vast library of Rubin media content, and many more resources. See our list of Rubin First Look Watch Party materials below.

Rubin First Look Watch Party Materials

Materials available on the day of Rubin First Look

  • Live stream of the Rubin First Look unveiling event in English (YouTube Live stream)

  • Live stream of the Rubin First Look Watch Party in Santiago, Chile in Spanish (YouTube Live stream)

  • Live Domecast of the unveiling event for planetariums in English (available natively for Digistar domes or through a 2k fulldome YouTube Live stream; hosted by the U.S. Space & Rocket Center's INTUITIVE Planetarium)

  • WorldWide Telescope tours of the first Rubin images

All Watch Parties will be able to view and zoom in on the First Look press release images when released during the Rubin First Look unveiling event. If a venue, for technical reasons (like importing into a planetarium system), needs the full-resolution materials in advance, they may apply for 24-hour embargoed access to the following materials (with download open 48 hours in advance):

  • Rubin First Look Press Release with First Look images and videos.

Online materials (materials will be linked as they become available)

  • Rubin Media Kit

  • Rubin slide deck

  • Advertising graphic

  • Rubin fulldome videos

  • Rubin fulldome images

  • Rubin flat videos

  • Rubin flat images

  • Rubin 360 panoramic images

  • Cerro Pachon Virtual Tour

  • Rubin 3D model (The Cosm-Rubin Digistar planetarium package, available for Digistar domes)

  • Messengers of Time and Space planetarium show

  • Hashtag #RubinWatchParty (to exchange photos and videos of Rubin Watch Parties across the U.S., Chile, and globally)

  • Visibility of the event on the Rubin Observatory website and through our wide social media network

  • Certificate associating your Watch Party with NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory

Host a Rubin First Look Watch Party

Complete the sign up form below to host a Rubin First Look Watch Party at your venue.

What do we expect of you?

The host organization must agree to the following:

  1. The event(s) will be held on the date of First Look, exact date to be determined.

  2. The institution organizing the event is expected to bear the costs of the event.

  3. Honor the embargo. Information, images, and videos may not be displayed before the press release is published, exact time to be determined.

  4. Engage with social media by sharing images from your event(s) using the hashtag #RubinWatchParty

  5. Ideally, other activities will be included in the event, such as a talk by a scientist or a hands-on activity.

Schedule

Leading up to First Look

T–48 hours

A password-protected zip file of embargoed material packages and Domecast materials (including several minutes of 4k fulldome video) is sent to Tier 2 events with signed embargo agreements.

T–24 hours

The password to the zip file with embargoed material packages and Domecast materials is sent to Tier 2 events with signed embargo agreements.

Day of Rubin First Look (will be updated as exact times are determined)

Pre-show Setup and Testing

T–3 hours

Domecast join window will open from U.S. Space & Rocket Center for Digistar domes.

T–2 hours

Domecast launch for Digistar domes (no one can join after the domecast is started). Brief testing with sites as needed.

T–2 hours

Test the press conference live stream (holding image/countdown)

T–1.5 hours

YouTube Domecast goes live. All domes will have a title screen displayed for walk-in and welcome on YouTube and Digistar. Domecast programming will begin at T–30 min.

T–1 hour

Join the live Rubin First Look unveiling event feed. This feed will run the Introductory/sizzle/hype video for walk-in and welcome.

T–1 hour

Local scientists and dignitaries present [optional]

T–30 min

Domecast programming begins on YouTube and Digistar.
30 minutes: Rubin Observatory Introduction
60 minutes: First Look unveiling event feed (with fulldome image reveals!)

T–5 min

Local introductions of the unveiling event feed [optional]

T–0

First Look unveiling event starts.
40 minutes: podium speakers and image reveal
20 minutes: discussion and Q&A

T+20 min

Unveiling of Rubin’s first images! The press release goes live on rubinobservatory.org and partner websites.

T+1 hour

The First Look unveiling event feed ends. Local content and Q&A take over [optional]

Contact

Email us at RubinParty@noirlab.edu.

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