Communicating
Javier Méndez (ING Public Relations Officer,
jma@ing.iac.es)
27 February 2002
Revised: 3 July 2003
Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes; Apartado
321; E-38700 Santa Cruz de La Palma; Canary Islands; Spain
Abstract
The Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes (ING) operates the
4.2m William Herschel Telescope (WHT), the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT)
and the 1.0m Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope (JKT) on behalf of the Particle Physics
and
0.
0. Introduction
The Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes (ING) consists of the
4.2m William Herschel Telescope (WHT), the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT)
and the 1.0m Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope (JKT). The ING is located 2,350m above
sea level at the Roque de Los Muchachos Observatory (ORM) on the island of La
Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. The WHT is the largest telescope of its kind in
Western Europe.
The construction, operation, and development of the ING
telescopes is the result of a collaboration between the United Kingdom, the
Netherlands and Spain. The site is provided by Spain, and in return Spanish
astronomers receive 20 per cent of the observing time on the telescopes. The
operation of the site is overseen by an International Scientific Committee, or
Comité Científico Internacional (CCI).
A further 75 per cent of the observing time is shared by
the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. On the JKT the international
collaboration embraces astronomers from Ireland. The remaining 5 per cent is
reserved for large scientific projects to promote international collaboration
between institutions of the CCI member countries.
The ING operates, maintains and developes the telescopes on
behalf of the Particle Physics and
1. Overview of
Public Relations at ING
1.1 Motivation
The promotion of science is one of the five objectives of PPARC’s
corporate plan:
"to attract public interest and excitement, and to draw young people into science. We will work with our partners in education and the media to encourage community-wide efforts to promote and explain our science, especially to young people."
Public Relations (PR) activities on La Palma is one of the
ING organisational values:
"Maintain a good relationship with the public on La
Palma."
And finally, as an observatory, we need to keep in touch
with our users (the astronomers).
1.2 Defining the audience
By region: La Palma, UK/the Netherlands, and the rest of the
world.
By groups: journalists, young people (schoolchildren,
undergraduate and graduate students), astronomers and the public in general
(including amateur astronomers).
1.3 Current PR facilities at ING
1.3.1 Information values
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Observational
astronomy: the excitement of (real-time) research, instrument and telescope
developments, etc
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The day-to-day life
in a world-class observatory
1.3.2 Staff
At
present ING contracts a half-time astronomer to work as PR officer. His duties
can be summarised as follows:
And this is the professional and
personal profile:
Professional
experience: public
communication
Education (academic, artistic, specific): astrophysics
degree
Skills: good communication in Spanish and English.
Personal actitud: enthusiastic.
Place in staff organigram: astronomy group, reporting to
director.
Process and type of contract: part-time astronomer involved
in the operation of the telescopes at a low level, flexible in working time.
Other profesional skills: web design, graphical design.
1.3.3 Computing facilities
Web server and mirror in UK, good communication with the
outside world and good general level of facilities.
1.3.4 External support
Eventually the PR officer works together with the PR teams
of our funding agencies: PPARC, NWO and IAC.
1.4 Aims and objectives
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To become a reliable
and authorised source of informacion.
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To promote ING
science and activities.
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To get closer to our
audience.
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To disseminate
astronomy knowledge.
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To support astronomy
education and build science culture up.
2.
Strategy
The general PR strategy can be summarised as below:
3.
Activities
The PR officer carries out the following activities:
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AUDIENCE
TARGET |
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ACTIVITY |
Public in general |
Astronomers |
Journalists |
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PRESS |
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X |
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X |
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X |
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X |
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X |
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X |
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INFORMATION SERVICES |
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X |
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X |
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PUBLICATIONS |
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X |
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X |
X |
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X |
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PPARC’s Frontiers magazine, CCI annual report, etc. |
X |
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3.1 Time organisation
Daily tasks (30% of working time): mail, email, visits, souvenir sale,
etc. Rest of the time devoted to eventual work, projects and training, sorted
by priority and length term.
4. Measuring efficiency
Below we show examples of some of our PR activities and how efficiently
the objectives are reached.
4.1 4.1
Example of press release
In July 2000 the Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope was the first to observe the
break-up of the nucleus of comet C/1999 S4 (LINEAR), never observed before in a
comet. We sent out a press release 24 hours after the first IAU telegram was
released by the observer and we kept the press informed with another press
release resulting from new observations with the INT one week later. These
press releases reached the specialised press worldwide. Thanks to this
discovery and subsequent coverage in the press, HST and VLT telescopes took the
decision to observe the comet. These telescopes acquired astonishing images of
the break-up.
4.2 The ING Newsletter
The ING Newsletter is primarily published on-line in html and pdf
format twice a year in March and September. Notification of every new issue is
given using [INGNEWS] email exploder. Printed copies are mailed to libraries.
This newsletter has had good feedback from our community of users. Typical
sections are: science, telescopes and instruments, other news and applying for
time. The ING Newsletter can be found on-line at
http://www.ing.iac.es/PR/newsletter/.
4.3 4.3
Visits to ING telescopes
Shown here is a typical year split-up of visits (number of visits in
brackets). On average 7,000 visitors are shown around every year.



4.4 4.4
The schools project
This project aims at strengthening links with schools in the UK and the
Netherlands by offering either the possibility of visiting the observatory as
part of an educational trip to La Palma or an observing night on the JKT on a
discretionary night. In the latter case, the students, who are selected after
an astronomy competition at their schools, fly to La Palma a couple of days
before observing, prepare the observing programme, set up the telescope, observe and reduce
the data with the help of a support astronomer. The observing programme can be their own, one of our PR projects or
a real research project in collaboration with an astronomer. The ING school
project is a pilot experience which has proved to be very successful. More
information can be found at http://www.ing.iac.es/PR/schools/.
4.5 4.5
The production of
astonishing images
A picture is worth a thousand words, particularly in astronomy. At ING
we are in a privileged situation. The range of available imaging instruments
allows us to produce wide-field images of objects of different sizes, which in
combination with the good site observing conditions and appropiate reduction
techniques, allows us to obtain high-quality images adequate for publishing.
Furthermore, images can be made accessible from the telescopes almost in
real-time thanks to our PR pipeline processing tool (see poster in this
conference).

Figure 1. A comparison between an image of M51 taken using the Prime
Focus Camera on the William Herschel Telescope and an image of the same object
from Hubble Space Telescope’s Heritage Project. The WHT image is part of the
ING high-quality CCD image collection. More information:
http://www.ing.iac.es/PR/images_index.html
5. Conclusions
A summary of PR organisation at ING has been presented. The way this
has been organised can also be taken as an example of how astronomy can be
disseminated from other observatories run by independent institutions like ING.
For more information on PR organisation at ING please visit ING’s Public Information web site at http://www.ing.iac.es/PR/ or at our mirror in UK http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/ING/PR/.