Bibcode
Schulz, B.; Kinkel, U.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
`The calibration legacy of the ISO Mission', proceedings of a conference held Feb 5-9, 2001. Edited by L. Metcalfe, A. Salama, S.B. Peschke and M.F. Kessler. Published as ESA Publications Series, ESA SP-481. European Space Agency, 2003, p. 313.
Fecha de publicación:
0
2003
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
The planning of the ISOPHOT (Lemke et al. 1996) calibration during the
Performance Verification (PV) phase, with its 4 day turn-around cycle,
required mission planning tools in the hands of the Instrument Dedicated
Team (IDT). We developed a system, that gave full command of all
instrument functions and which allowed planning of the observations for
entire 16 h revolutions with an accuracy of seconds. Thus, time
consuming loops between the IDT and Mission Planning were avoided and a
maximum scheduling efficiency was achieved. Only in this way were raster
observations of Solar System Objects possible, which were an important
ingredient for the photometric calibration. Access to all functions of
the instrument was mandatory, to measure in unusual instrument
configurations, and to test updates of Astronomical Observation
Templates (AOT). The heterogeneous system was built in very short time
and consisted of a variety of components like spreadsheets, unix shell
scripts, and programs written in IDL and FORTRAN. These were running on
various platforms under VAX-VMS, Ultrix, Solaris and Microsoft Windows
3.11. We will describe the system and its performance and discuss in
retrospect advantages and disadvantages introduced by the approach.