Auto-Correlation Spectral Imaging System (ACSIS) is an IF, correlation, reduction, and display system for the submillimeter telescope James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). It can produce calibrated spectral images in real time and enables rapid imaging of large areas of the sky over a wide spectral range or at high resolution from up to 16 receiver feeds. Now more than 20 years old, the original 8-10GHz synthesizers for the down conversion module are obsolete and no longer available. Due to the hardware changes in the new 4-10GHz model, an interface circuit is needed to shorten the rise time of the serial clock signal. Further upgrades can better support wide IF band 2-12GHz receiver applications, such as Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) band-6 receivers. This paper discusses the observatory’s development of a new correlator that utilizes several existing electronics to support current and future receivers.
The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) is the largest single dish telescope in the world focused on submillimeter astronomy - and it remains at the forefront of sub-millimeter discovery space. JCMT continues its push for higher efficiency and greater science impact with a switch to fully remote operation. This switch to remote operations occurred on November 1st 2019. The switch to remote operations should be recognized to be part of a decade long process involving incremental changes leading to Extended Observing - observing beyond the classical night shift - and eventually to full remote operations. The success of Remote Observing is indicated in the number of productive hours and continued low fault rate from before and after the switch.
Most telescope proposal science cases are governed by the need to achieve a given SNR (Signal-to-noise ratio). However, traditionally telescopes award applicants a certain number of hours rather than an SNR or noise. Noise calculators cannot solve this problem entirely, due to variations in weather, elevation and instrument performance when an observation is actually carried out. The JCMT is currently shifting towards awarding users (when appropriate) a given RMS towards their source/s instead of a time spent observing, initially for our new 230 GHz instrument Ū ū. The JCMT already had many necessary parts of this process in place (noise calculators, a robust ‘live’ pipeline, and an extremely flexible queue based system). This presentation describes our efforts to start implementing this process for our users, discusses the necessary systems and software required, and describes the lessons applicable for other observatories.
Namakanui is an instrument containing three inserts in an ALMA type Dewar. The three inserts are ‘Ala’ihi, ‘U’ū and ‘Āweoweo operating around 86, 230 and 345GHz. The receiver is being commissioned on the JCMT. It will be used for both Single dish and VLBI observations. We will present commissioning results and the system.
Apart from a brief Cassegrain run in the summer of 2011, UKIRT has been
operated in WFCAM-only mode since January 2009 and remotely from Hilo
since December 2010. UKIRT operations are now in the process of being
handed over to the University of Arizona who are interested in
recommissioning at least some of the Cassegrain instruments. While at the
time of this writing the work is mostly still in the planning stage it is
actively being thought about, and some of the infrastructure is being put
(back) into place.
KEYWORDS: Telescopes, Control systems, Gemini Observatory, Observatories, Data storage, Astronomy, Data acquisition, Java, Databases, Software development
The steady improvement in telescope performance at UKIRT and the increase in data acquisition rates led to a strong desired for an integrated observing framework that would meet the needs of future instrumentation, as well as providing some support for existing instrumentation. Thus the Observatory Reduction and Acquisition Control (ORAC) project was created in 1997 with the goals of improving the scientific productivity in the telescope, reducing the overall ongoing support requirements, and eventually supporting the use of more flexibly scheduled observing. The project was also expected to achieve this within a tight resource allocation. In October 1999 the ORAC system was commissioned at the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope.
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