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SM4 Readiness Review. Tuesday, 9 September 2008, 9:00am -12:40pm Welcome Hubble Mission Office SMOV Program Carl Biagetti, 9-9:30am Proposal Processing Status Denise Taylor, 9:30-9:45am Long Range Planning David Adler, 9:45-10am
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SM4 Readiness Review • Tuesday, 9 September 2008, 9:00am -12:40pm • Welcome Hubble Mission Office • SMOV Program Carl Biagetti, 9-9:30am • Proposal Processing Status Denise Taylor, 9:30-9:45am • Long Range Planning David Adler, 9:45-10am • Contingency Plans for STIS/ACS Neill Reid, 10 - 10:15am • Planning & Scheduling Merle Reinhart & George Chapman, 10:15-10:45am • …Break for 15 minutes… • Commanding Alan Welty, 11-11:15am • Data Processing and Archiving Faith Abney, 11:15-11:45am • Calibration Pipeline Processing Warren Hack, 11:45-12:05pm • Operational Readiness Al Holm, 12:05-12:25pm • Infrastructure Contingency Plans Doris McClure, 12:25-12:40pm
SM4 Readiness Review • Wednesday, 10 September 2008, 9:00-12:30: • SM4 Observatory Support Chris Long • WFC3 Readiness John MacKenty • COS and STIS Readiness Alessandra Aloisi • ACS Readiness Linda Smith • NICMOS Readiness Tommy Wiklind • FGS and OTA Readiness Ed Nelan and Matt Lallo • OPO and ERO Readiness Mario Livio and Keith Noll
SMOV4 Planning Readiness Carl Biagetti System Engineering Branch - OED
SMOV4 Plan Overview …1 • SMOV4 Plan • Provides for the timely commissioning of the Observatory for science following SM4 • Commissions the newly SIs on channel-by-channel basis • Introduces GO science on a channel-by-channel basis as SMOV progresses • Recommissions the restored SIs on channel-by-channel basis • Recommissions serviced Observatory Systems • Performs Early Release Observations (EROs) • Satisfies theSMOV4 requirements of 21 March 2007 • Plan presented, reviewed, and approved 12 Oct. 2007 (SMR-4029, CCR 5248)
Generic SMOV Processfollowing each HST Servicing Early Release Observations New/Revived Instruments Spacecraft Subsystems Commissioning PCS/EPS/TCS… HST Release from Shuttle SMOV Start Focus/Alignment of SI Optics Instruments Science Calibrations GO Science Ramp-up As Instruments/Channels Are commissioned Instrument Preps Engineering Check-Outs Outgassing Cooldown
SMOVs 2 – 4EXTERNAL ORBITSHISTORICAL COMPARISON Notes: 1. STIS and NICMOS required more orbits than planned because of the NICMOS thermal shortand theopto-coupler resets in both SIs. 2. SMOV4 seems to be the most complex in terms of realtime interactions and in-line analyses.
SMOV4 Plan Overview …2 • SMOV4 Plan satisfies the following drivers • Perform EROs in time for Jan. AAS release • i.e., schedule observations in early December 2008 • Minimize excess FGS3 usage by timely commissioning of FGS2R2
SMOV4 Plan Overview …3 • SMOV4 Plan satisfies the following constraints • Long intervals for outgassing and contaminants dissipation • Bright Earth Avoidance (for 21 days from Release) • to avoid UV-induced polymerization of exposed optics (WFC3 POM) • COS NUV = 10 days from Release (per model) to allow internal pressure below 20 uTORR, before detector activation • COS FUV = 15 days from Release (per model) to allow internal pressure below 10 uTORR, before detector activation • WFC3 = 21 days from Release before cal lamp usage and TEC cooldown • Careful, incremental initial high-voltage ramp-ups • COS NUV/FUV • STIS NUV/FUV • ACS SBC
SMOV4 Plan Overview …4 • SMOV4 Plan prioritizes SMOV activities to allow schedule flexibility • Prioritization (High, Medium, Low) • Based on realistic assumptions about scheduling rates (external orbits) • Accommodates ERO schedule and other key dates • Accommodates non-SMOV (eg., GO, ERS) programs before SMOV completion
Prioritization of SMOV activities • High Priority = activities needed to enable EROs in early Dec. • Medium Priority = activities needed for enabling GO science • Low Priority = all other activities • Needed to satisfy all other SMOV4 requirements and reference file generation • Needed for handbook inputs in spring
SMOV Prioritization: COS • High Priority Activities (EROs) • Through NUV and FUV Alignment and Focus • Medium Priority Activities (Science enable) • All FUV cals beyond alignment/focus and target acq test • The rest of NUV wavelength scale calibration • Low Priority Activities • Low 1 – needed for reference files and handbook inputs (data needed by Feb. 1) • Low 2 – desirable but not required for handbook inputs • Low 3 – All others
SMOV Prioritization: WFC3 • High Priority Activities (EROs) • Through UVIS & IR Fine Alignment • In parallel with EROs • UVIS/IR/FGS alignment, UVIS/IR plate scales • Medium Priority Activities(for “Easy” GO science) • Internal flats, flat-field uniformity, photometric zero-points • Low Priority Activities(for “Hard” GO science) • UVIS/IR image quality, PSF wings, UVIS PSF Core Modulation (shutter test), pointing stability, IR grisms
SMOV Prioritization: ACS • High Priority Activities (EROs) • WFC Optimization Campaign (OC), image quality, sensitivity • SBC turn-on, UV monitor • Medium Priority Activities (GO science) • SBC PSF • HRC image quality, sensitivity, geometric distortion, coronagraph commissioning • Low Priority Activities • None remaining, but assume the option to delay HRC commissioning in favor of WFC/SBC in early SMOV
SMOV Prioritization: STIS & NICMOS • NICMOS • High Priority Activities (EROs) • Through Aperture Location activity • Medium Priority Activities (GO science) • Through Aperture Location activity and SIAF update • Aperture knowledge without SIAF may be sufficient • STIS • High = STIS External Focus Check • Medium = NUV Optical Format Verification, FUV Image Quality • Low = CCD Spectroscopic Throughput, Image/Pointing Stability, NUV Image Quality
COS NUV SCI ENABLE WFC3 UVIS/IR “HARD “SCI ENABLE ACS SBC SCI ENABLE ACS HRC SCI ENABLE UV IR COS FUV SCI ENABLE, WFC3 IR “EASY” SCI ENABLE WFC3 UVIS/IR ERO ENABLE, UVIS “EASY” SCIENCE ENABLE, NIC SCIENCE ENABLE, COS FUV ERO ENABLE STIS SCI & ERO ENABLE ACS WFC SCI & ERO ENABLE, NIC ERO ENABLE, FGS2R2 GUIDING ENABLE
Critical Operations & Operational Challenges in SMOV • HV Ramp-ups for STIS and COS • Focus & Alignments for COS & WFC3 • Iterative processes for each SI in the same weeks • Realtime Commanding • GENSLEWs (Use Offsets) • Used in several proposals for pointing updates before aperture data (SIAF) is in place • Needed to meet ERO schedule • Table uploads, Event flag mgmt, etc. • Fast Data Turnaround (FASTRACK) • Needed in several places for in-line analyses
Critical Operations and Operational Challenges in SMOV Weeks 1-7 Yellow indicate times of high activity FTn = Fastrack data delivery requested by n proposals
Organization, Management, Reporting during SMOV • SMOV Team • Consists of STScI & Project science & engineering staff • Lead personnel identified for each critical activity • Team to meet regularly (“morning meeting”) • Daily, for 1st couple of weeks, then at a slowly decreasing frequency • To assess daily progress, review daily plans • Determine replans • Contributions from each SI and subsystem teams • Daily minutes/reports to be published Project-wide • SMOV TTRB • To assess replan requests • Make recommendations to HST MO and Project
SMOV4 Contingency Planning • High-level contingency plans are being worked for each SI/subsystem • Including SMOV OTA focus contingency
SMOV PROPOSAL IMPLEMENTATION TEAM (PIT) EARNED VALUE (EV) as of 4Sep08 • 10 EV points/proposal • 3 pts for prop submit • 2 pts for 1st PIT mtg • 2 pts for 2nd PIT mtg • 3 pts for prop complete 165 SMOV4 PROPOSALS = 1650 total EV points - 163 PROPOSALS PIT-APPROVED PIT PROGRESS - 100 %PLANNED EARNED VALUE for Aug. 31 - 99.0 %ACTUAL EARNED VALUE as of Sep 4
Credit goes to dozens and dozens of people - STScI, GSFC, COS & WFC3 Teams For a very good SMOV4 Plan
Proposal Processing Status Denise Taylor, Observation Planning Branch - OED
Proposal Processing Status • SMOV Proposals • 153 proposals (not including ERO) • 35 COS props (164 ext. orb., 111 int. orb.) - 7 props still working • 31 ACS props (38 ext. orb., 493 int. orb.) - 1 props still working • 42 WFC3 props (163 ext. orb., 370 int. orb.) - All ready • 25 STIS props (21 ext. orb., 174 int. orb.) - All ready • 12 NIC props (34 ext. orb., 136 int. orb.) - All ready • 2 PCS props (24 ext. orb., 26 int. orb.) - All ready • 6 FGS props (57 ext. orb.) - All ready
Proposal Processing Status • SMOV Proposals (continued) • 145 are ready for flight. • 8 are being worked: • 1 ACS + 1 COS props need to be resubmitted, reprocessed and re-reviewed • 6 COS props need CS reviews
Proposal Processing Status • ERO Proposals • 9 proposals for ERO • 4 are ready for flight (16 orbits): • One WFPC2 ERO • One STIS ERO • One ACS ERO • One COS ERO • 4 have been submitted and are being worked (need CS reviews) (20 orbits): • One COS ERO • One WFC3 ERO • One COS ERO • One WFC3 ERO • 1 has not been submitted (? orbits)
Proposal Processing Status • Early Science Proposals (132 orbits possible for execution before 31 January 2009) • COS/GTO • 11520 - QSO Absorbers, Galaxies and Large-scale Structures in the Local Universe (26/39 orbits) • 11534 - Atmosphere of a Transiting Planet (20/20 orbits) GO • 11566 - Imaging Saturn’s Equinoctal Auroras (6/12 orbits) • 11612 - Eta Carinae’s Continuing Instability and Recovery - the 2009 Event (9/16 orbits) • 11706 - The Parallax of the Planet Host Star XO-3 (1/6 orbits) • 11788 - The Architecture of Exoplanetary Systems (11/63 orbits) • 11789 - An Astrometric Calibration of Population II Distance Indicators (11/33 orbits) ERS • 11359 - Panchromatic WFC3 Survey of Galaxies at Intermediate z (28/104 orbits) • 11360 - Star Formation in Nearby Galaxies (20/110 orbits)
Proposal Processing Status • Cycle 17 General Observer Pool • 197 GO proposals including those from HST Cycle 17 TAC, Chandra TAC, and previous HST TACs, for 3627 orbits. • 16 SNAP proposals, for 1417 orbits. • 24 GTO/COS proposals for 291 orbits. • 3 GTO/ACS proposals for 24 orbits. • 2 ERS proposals for 214 orbits. • 3 GO/PAR proposals for 410 orbits.
Proposal Processing Status • Cycle 17 General Observer Pool (continued) • Program Coordinators (PCs) are processing observations in the general pool: ~ 6000 orbits. • Instrument teams have begun reviewing these observations and will have most done before SM4. Remaining will be done according to Long Range Plan schedule. • Currently 9% unschedulable, mostly due to incompatibility of requested scheduling constraints (orients, guide stars, timing links, etc.). This is typical for early ingest; PCs will resolve these issues throughout the coming months. • Final processing steps will wait until after SM4, when the ground system is reconfigured for 3 gyro mode.
Proposal Processing Status • After SM4 • SMOV proposals and science proposals will be reworked as needed during SMOV. • Remaining Cycle 15 and Cycle 16 proposals will be reworked for 3-gyro scheduling. • Cycle 17 pool will continue processing as usual, to execute observations according to the Long Range Plan. • Begin processing Cycle 17 calibration proposals (Calibration review on 9/25/08; Phase II deadline TBD).
The Long Range Plan David Adler Science & Mission Scheduling Branch - OED
Long Range Planning Group (LRPG) Activity Summary • Remainder of Cycle 16: • 173 orbits before SM4, 441 orbits after SM4 in Cycle 16 “tail.” • The LRPG is monitoring remaining Cycle 16 WFPC2 observations. • all but one 3-orbit ToO follow-up should be completed by SM4. • PI of that program will put in a request to change SI if needed. • The LRPG has incorporated SMOV, SI commissioning, ERO, ERS, and GTO constraints into the Cycle 17 planning process. • A preliminary Cycle 17 LRP has been built and verified. • The LRPG has identified/developed plans for managing SM4 contingencies in Cycle 17 planning.
Preliminary Cycle 17 Plan Highlights • December/January priorities: • High priority SMOV • EROs • ERS/GTOs • Time-critical Cycle 17 science • Medium/low priority SMOV • Cycle 16 GO science • Cycle 16 planning information for Oct-Dec programs is being maintained in case of launch slip. • All cycle 16 science planned for Oct-Dec can be replanned for 2009. • Under-subscription in early 2009 – LRPG is leaving space for Cycle 17 calibration programs, Target of Opportunity programs, DD, HOPR repeats, etc.
Preliminary Cycle 17 LRP – Oct-Feb launch BEA SM4 ACS SBC COS NUV SI commissioning milestones ACS WFC/HRC NIC WFC3 UVIS/IR “hard” COS FUV WFC3 IR “easy” STIS WFC3 UVIS “easy”
LRPG Transition from SMOV to Cycle 17 Science • Preliminary Cycle 17 plan is built • Statistics: • 4200 orbits – Cycle 16 and 17 science in working LRP • +600 orbits - SMOV/ERO (not in plan) • +850 orbits - “unplanned” – 2 orbits a day of calibration, HOPR, ToO, etc • --------------- • 5650 orbits in Cycle 17 • -650 orbits - cycle 17 tail – beyond Dec 31, 2009 • =5000 orbits from 10/20/08 – 12/31/09 = 11.42 orbits/day = 80 orb/week • Plan will not be released to the public until a couple of weeks after deployment when the state of the observatory is known.
LRPG Contingency Plans • If there’s a launch slip: • Long Range Plan will be rebuilt to reflect the change. • For a 1 - 4 week slip, the following can fill the gap: • Existing Cycle 16 science programs • Cycle 17 NIC science that can schedule in 2-Gyro • Cycle 15/16 Snaps • Cycle 17 NIC Snaps that can schedule in 2-Gyro • 5 + week slip: • Existing science and Snaps, as described above; studies are ongoing to see how far out this can be extended. • If more science is needed, LRPG will consult with the Science Policies Group (SPG) for a course of action.
Summary - LRPG Readiness for SM4 • Transition plan between Cycle 16 – SM4 – SMOV – Cycle 17 is in place. • Preliminary Cycle 17 LRP has been built and is ready for execution. It is currently on-hold pending the outcome of SM4. • The LRP incorporates all constraints/HST orbit resource requirements of all SMOV (including SI commissioning) and ERO/ERS activities. • Process/policies are in place for updating the Cycle 17 plan in response to SM4 contingencies. • The LRPG is ready for SM4!
Contingency plan if STIS and/or ACS are not available • The C17 TAC recommended programs based on the assumption that SM4 would be fully successful, i.e., both STIS and ACS would be repaired • STIS and ACS are scheduled for repair after COS and WFC3 and their repair is more challenging • Therefore STIS and ACS carry a higher risk of not being available in C17 than COS and WFC3
Instrument Contingencies Neill Reid Science Mission Office
C17 allocation by orbit: • STIS: 8% of total; includes imaging and spectroscopy • ACS: 25% of total; includes 1% of SBC use (currently operational) • Numbers include parallels but no snapshots (1357 snapshot targets awarded in C17; STIS: 140; ACS: 518)
C17 proposers were required to address whether their programs could be switched to a different instrument if STIS/ACS were not available • Using this information, the TAC endorsed or rejected an instrument switch and made a recommendation to the Director
STIS • Moderate-resolution UV spectroscopy can often be switched to COS • Imaging can almost always be done with WFC3 or ACS • Optical spectroscopy, spatially resolved spectroscopy, high-resolution spectroscopy, etc., need STIS • ~40% of all orbits using STIS can be switched • The Long Range Planning Group has run simulations showing that when STIS observations are removed, science with other SIs can be front-loaded in the Cycle 17 long range plan
ACS • Standard broad- and narrow-band imaging can be switched to WFC3 in most cases • SBC observations continue to be available • Optical coronagraphy, polarimetry, high-resolution imaging, etc., need ACS • ~85% of all orbits using ACS can be switched • The Long Range Planning Group has run simulations showing that when ACS observations are removed, science with other SIs can be front-loaded in the Cycle 17 long range plan
Impact if STIS/ACS are not available • Using the TAC recommendation as a guide-line and after additional STScI review, PI’s will be notified whether instruments can be switched • Process similar to that used when ACS failed and observations were switched to WFPC2/NICMOS • PIs may appeal to the TTRB if switch was rejected • Switch can be done quickly (1 – 2 months) • Scheduling impact: ≤10% of the total orbits (sum of all C17 orbits) will be lost because the science requirements preclude an instrument switch • Orbits can be replaced, e.g., by snapshots
Planning & Scheduling Merle Reinhart and George Chapman System Engineering Branch - OED
Overview • Merle Reinhart • What is Planning and Scheduling? • SMOV Database Management • P&S Procedures and Tools • George Chapman • Rendezvous Intercept SMS Process • Ephemeris Management • Deploy SMS Process • SMOV Calendar/SMS Build Process • P&S Team Readiness • Pending Changes • Items Still in Work
Proposals PRD SCIOPSDB Instructions TRANS SPIKE C&C List SPSS PASS HST/TDRS Ephemeris CCS SCS NGSS MOSS SMS FDF PRD GSC Orbit File What is Planning and Scheduling?Long Range Planning, Short Term Scheduling & PASS
DatabaseNSSC-1 Flight Software • NSSC-1 FSW updates are required to support SM4 • NSSC-1 8.6 supports full complement of SIs during SM4 • This will be installed Sep. 10 during SMS 252 (SMS 254 is first use) • Avoids software changes during SM4 • NSSC-1 9.0 removes support for COSTAR and WFPCII • This will be installed immediately after SM4 during the H&S SMS
DatabasePRD/SCIOPSDB • OPSPRD 7.0 has been deployed to SMS 254 • First used after NSSC-1 8.6 FSW is loaded • PR 60745: TFPF JWOSCPRM for oscilloscope mode parameters • Planned Updates • PR 60655, 60781: PLCP PIPHTHET, PIHETPHT, PISAFFLT needed for WFC3 • After SM4 rendezvous, but prior to deployment • PRD & SCIOPSDB updates for SMOV4 are included in the OPS/SM4 database merge (described later) • Other planned updates for use on initial H&S SMS • PR 60663: PLCP PJSAFHLD for ACS safing recovery including TEC commanding • PR 60739: AGCF and SCHF parameters for switch to 3-gyro mode • PR 60742: Table ODB for NSSC-1 9.0 FSW • Freeze Waivers will be requested for each update
DatabaseSMOV Preparation Environment • SMOV4 development utilizes the same methodology that was successfully used for all previous Servicing Missions. • Use a separate database and disk space from Operations, but the same machines/servers. • spss_sm4 database for SMOV4 development • spss database for current SPSS Operations • Uses the operational software and tools, but utilizes different PRD/SCIOPSDB and SMS Instructions • Allows simultaneous Flight Operations and SMOV development • Two environments are isolated • The spss_sm4 database is managed in the same way as the SPSS Operations database. • This SMOV4 environment is used to: • Prepare the SMOV proposals for execution • Create the SMGT products • Create the SMOV4 representative products • Post-SM4 DRM Planning and Scheduling exercise
DatabaseThe Merge Process • SMOV environment gets merged into the Operations environment after rendezvous and berthing occurs. • Unload all the SMOV4 and housekeeping proposals from the spss_sm4 database • This stores the proposals on disk as an sql load file • This part of the process nominally occurs right around launch time and takes about a day • Get a backup of the spss database • This allows us to easily restore to pre-launch if necessary • Database Administrator moves the contents of specified tables from the spss_sm4 database into the spss database • This transfers the PRD/SCIOPSDB information and the Instructions needed post-SM4 • Load the SMOV4 and housekeeping proposals into the spss database • Database Administrator will rebuild the table indices to ensure good database performance