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Bernhard Fleck SOHO Project Scientist SOHO Science Operations Now and Then.

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Presentation on theme: "Bernhard Fleck SOHO Project Scientist SOHO Science Operations Now and Then."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bernhard Fleck SOHO Project Scientist bfleck@esa.nascom.nasa.gov SOHO Science Operations Now and Then

2 Outline  Mission overview  Science operations setup Experimenters’ Operations Facility (EOF) Planning process SOHO Joint Observing Plans (JOPs) SOHO Science Operations Coordinators (SOCs)  Data processing, archiving and data distribution  SOHO science operations now  Summary / lessons learned

3 SOHO – quick facts  Joint ESA/NASA mission  Built in Europe, launched by NASA (2 Dec 1995)  Operated from NASA/GSFC  Orbits around L1  Nominal mission: 2 years  12 instruments aboard

4 SOHO’s science objectives A) Solar Interior What are its structure and dynamics? B) Solar Corona Why does it exist and how is it heated? C) Solar Wind Where is it accelerated and how?

5 Key results  First images of the interior of a star  Coronal heating  Solar wind acceleration  Monitoring total solar irradiance (‘solar constant’) and EUV flux  Revolutionized our ability to forecast ‘space weather’  Discovered over 2000 comets

6 SOHO Experimenters’ Operations Facility  Located at NASA/GSFC, next to SOHO MOC Co-location of experiment teams and SOHO FOT Proved to be very beneficial (a) operational, b) public affairs / tour groups)  Heritage from earlier solar physics missions: OSO, Skylab, SMM  Focal point for mission science planning and instrument operations Became “Mecca of Solar Physics” Influenced a whole generation of solar physicists  Reception of real-time and playback telemetry  Data processing to determine instrument commands  Near real-time commanding directly from instrumenters’ workstations Resembles more operations of a ground-based observatory than operations of a conventional space-based observatory Allows for quick reaction to targets of opportunity (re-pointing)

7 SOHO Experimenters’ Operations Facility Meeting Room SOCs PS EIT LASCO UVCS SUMER CDS MDI

8 SOHO Experimenters’ Operations Facility

9 Science planning  SOHO from the beginning conceived as a package of complementary instruments  coordination critically important for mission success  “Maximizing immediate and future scientific output of all SOHO observations” Unique input for numerical modeling of solar phenomena Planned and ad hoc campaigns (co-observations)  Joint Observing Programs (JOPs) –Coherent observing plans to maximize the scientific return of the individual instruments by coordinating their plans for the study of specific solar phenomena –Many JOPs involve collaborations with ground-based observatories or other space missions –227 science JOPs and 14 Intercalibration JOPs –http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/soc/JOPs/http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/soc/JOPs/ –SOHO campaign database: 1307 records  Word Wide Web key tool for SOHO science operations from the very beginning  Software planning and scheduling tool developed for SOHO (in IDL)

10 Science planning tool

11 Science planning process  Nested scheme: monthly, weekly, daily meetings, with strategic input from quarterly SWT meetings Quarterly SWT meetings: –Overall observing priorities –Major campaigns like “Whole Sun Month” –Policies regarding reaction to Major Flare Watches –Resolution of conflicts and disputes –Guest Investigator proposals Monthly meetings: –General observing plan for coming month by Science Operations Team (SOT) –Scheduling of campaigns and JOPs Weekly and daily meetings: –Refinements of monthly plan –Coordination with ground-based observatories –Final pointing up-dates

12 SOHO Science Operations Coordinators  1 ESA, 2 NASA (+ several student SOCs for off-hours and weekends)  Interface between instrument teams and FOT  Focal point-of-contact for joint observing campaigns with other space missions and ground-based observatories  Coordination of special operations S/C roll S/C off-pointing calibration rockets  Maintain long-term plan, campaign databases, etc.  First priority: instrument health and safety

13 Flight Operations Team SOC CDS UVCS LASCO EIT MDI Instruments with constant operational presence at the EOF Operations overview

14 Flight Operations Team SOC CDS UVCS LASCO EIT MDI TRACE TRACE is sometimes dubbed the 13 th SOHO instrument, with constant EOF presence Operations overview

15 Flight Operations Team SOC CDS UVCS LASCO EIT MDI SWAN TRACE SWAN team in Europe sends delayed command files to EOF. Present at EOF for “special operations” (engineering etc). Operations overview

16 Flight Operations Team SOC CDS SUMER UVCS LASCO EIT MDI SWAN TRACE SUMER operates only during special campaigns with EOF presence Operations overview

17 Flight Operations Team SOC CDS SUMER UVCS LASCO EIT GOLF MDI VIRGO SWAN TRACE Particle Exp. GOLF, VIRGO, CELIAS, ERNE, and COSTEP send delayed command files daily or weekly (if any at all). Operations overview

18 Flight Operations Team SOC MEDOC CDS SUMER UVCS LASCO EIT GOLF MDI VIRGO SWAN TRACE Particle Exp. Multi-Experiment Data Operations Centre for SOHO (MEDOC) “Sister EOF” at Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale (IAS) in Orsay, France. Capability to send near-real-time commands, reception of real-time telemetry. Hosts “MEDOC Campaigns” with most daily science planning, and some commanding, performed at MEDOC. Operations overview

19 Flight Operations Team SOC MEDOC CDS SUMER UVCS LASCO EIT GOLF MDI VIRGO SWAN TRACE ULYSSES RHESSI Yohkoh Hinode STEREO Particle Exp. Joint observations with other spacecraft…… Operations overview

20 Flight Operations Team SOC MEDOC CDS SUMER UVCS LASCO EIT GOLF MDI VIRGO SWAN TRACE ULYSSES RHESSI Yohkoh Hinode STEREO Particle Exp. Operations overview Tenerife La Palma Kitt Peak Big Bear …and ground based observatories

21 Data processing  Telemetry (both real-time and recorder dumps) flow in real-time from DSN to SOHO EOF at GSFC  Data decompressed and reformatted in near real-time by PI teams and posted on SOHO pages More than 2/3 of over 2100 SOHO comets discovered by amateurs in SOHO real- time data  Final level-0 data produced by Data Distribution Facility with about 4 weeks delay Most data gaps and drop-outs filled by then Original distribution on CD-ROMs Since 1997 distribution through Internet

22 Data accessibility  Completely open data policy “The Sun is shining for everybody”  All SOHO data available online through SOHO archive PI sites Virtual Solar Observatory  Instrument resources pages Software tools (IDL) Calibration Analysis Key element for prompt and expedient data delivery by PI teams is the fact that we do not require calibrated data for ingestion into archive, but raw data + calibration software (which can be easily updated)

23 SOHO Archive  Developed by ESA SOHO PS team at GSFC Large variety of approaches in different PI teams Difficult to homogenize system Lesson learned: ESA involvement in planning process as early as possible  Content identical to that of PI teams Exception: high-rate MDI data, which are stored only at Stanford  Current to within a few months after level-0 data deliver  (Incomplete) European Mirror archives MEDOC, IAS Orsay, France Univ. of Torino, Italy RAL, UK Lesson learned: very difficult for universities and other research groups to follow through on such a long-term commitment  New SOHO archive @ ESAC providing additional functionality  Efforts underway for “final archive” (calibrated data)

24 SOHO science operations NOW  Budget cuts necessitated radical changes to SOHO science ops starting in early 2010  SOHO science ops now reduced to bare bones Then: service in a 3-star restaurant Now: McDonalds drive-through  SOHO EOF closed; no routine planning meetings anymore  No SOC anymore  All “self-serve” by PI teams  Except LASCO/EIT all instruments are commanded remotely from home institutions  SOHO PS single point-of-contact

25 Summary  Ops concept developed in the early 90ies proved to be successful and robust  Science coordination key factor for the great success of SOHO  Having a real science center very beneficial for the mission and the community No such focal point for STEREO, SDO or other planned solar missions  Early adoption of the World Wide Web as key tool for coordination, communication and data dissemination key decision  Maintenance of hardware/software infrastructure for 16+ years challenging  Open data policy to maximize the number of users Provision of both data and software tools No requirements on PI teams to provide final, calibrated, archive-quality data “living” archive  Start planning of science operations and data archiving as early as possible Work with instrument teams from very beginning of a project  Team spirit: integrated instrumenters/FOT/NASA/ESA team  Lights out ops working well so far

26 SOHO’s instruments


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