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Many of the ISO observers who assembled for this workshop at
Ringberg c- tle met for the third time in the Bavarian Alps. At two
previous meetings in 1989 and 1990 surveys were only a minor topic.
At that time we were excited by the discoveries of the IRAS survey
mission and wanted to follow it up with pointed observations using
an observatory telescope equipped with versatile instruments. With
the rapid development of detector arrays and stimulated by ISO's
Observing Time Allocation Committee, however, surveys eventually
became an issue for the upcoming mission. In a review paper on
"Infrared S- veys - the Golden Age of Exploration" given at an IAU
meeting in 1996, Chas Beichman already mentioned that there are ISO
surveys. They were at the bottom of his hit list, while the winners
were future space missions (Planck, SIRTF, etc. ) and ground-based
surveys in preparation (Sloan, 2MASS, DE- NIS, etc. ). He organized
his table according to the relative explorable volume, calculated
from the solid angle covered on the sky and the maximum distance
derived from the detection sensitivity. Clearly, with this ?gure of
merit, ISO, as a pointed observatory, is rated low. Applying the
classical de?nition of a survey, i. e. to search in as large a
volume as possible for new or rare objects and/or study large
numbers of objects of various classes in order to obtain
statistical properties, ISO was indeed limited.
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