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ROSES-24 Amendment 72: D.14 Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Research and Support Participation Opportunities Final Text and Due Dates

9 December 2024

D.14 Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Research and Support Participation Opportunities solicits proposals to work on preparation for the operational phase of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, using one of two categories depending on the type of work being proposed. These are:

Wide Field Science (WFS)

  • Supports investigations that prepare for and/or enhance the science return of Roman that can be addressed with its Wide Field Instrument (WFI)
  • Two different scales of project: Regular (two-year term, up to $150K/year) and Large (two-year term, ≲$500K/year)
  • Expect to award ≈12 WFS proposals with a roughly 2:1 balance of Regular: Large, subject to budgetary limits and sufficient meritorious proposals

Coronagraph Community Participation Program (CPP)

  • Solicits individuals or very small teams to work with the Coronagraph Instrument team to plan and execute its technology demonstration observations.
  • Selected proposals will have three-year terms; available funding can support ≲$200K/year awards
  • Expect to select around three CPP proposals; PIs will join the single team that plans and executes Coronagraph Instrument observations

ROSES-2024 Amendment 72 releases final text and due dates for D.14 Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Research and Support Participation Opportunities. Notices of intent are ardently requested by Friday, January 17, 2025, and proposals are due on Thursday, March 6, 2025.

This Amendment to the NASA Research Announcement "Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences (ROSES) 2024" (NNH24ZDA001N) is posted on the NASA research opportunity homepage and will appear on SARA's ROSES blog.

Programmatic questions regarding D.14 Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Research and Support Participation Opportunities, may be directed to Dominic Benford, at Dominic.Benford@nasa.gov. Technical questions concerning this program element may be directed to the Roman Senior Project Scientist, Julie McEnery, at julie.e.mcenery@nasa.gov.

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An illustration of Sun-like star HD 181327 and its surrounding debris disk. The star is at top right. It is surrounded by a far larger debris disk that forms an incomplete ellpitical path and is cut off at right. There’s a huge cavity between the star and the disk. The debris disk is shown in shades of light gray. Toward the top and left, there are finer, more discrete points in a range of sizes. The disk appears hazier and smokier at the bottom. The star is bright white at center, with a hazy blue region around it. The background of space is black. The label Artist's Concept appears at lower left.