The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is an integral field spectrograph on the Very Large Telescope Unit Telescope 4. The MUSE adaptive optics observing capabilities include a wide field (1 square arcmin), ground layer seeing-enhanced AO mode (WFM-AO), and a narrow field (7.5”×7.5”), laser tomography AO mode (NFM-AO). The MUSE AO observations use four laser guide stars (4LGS) to correct the atmospheric turbulence. The MUSE AO observations routinely improve image quality by a factor of 2 in the seeing-enhanced wide field (WFM-AO) observations and deliver image quality down to 50-60 milliarcsecond (mas) in the laser tomography AO (NFM-AO) mode. The 4LGS and AO systems at UT4 are stable, but there is still some chance that one of the lasers or Wavefront Sensors (WFS) is out of service, leaving us with 3LGS. In the last few years, we have successfully commissioned and characterized the MUSE AO degraded mode (3LGS mode) for both MUSE WFM-AO and NFM-AO modes. In this paper, we present the commissioning activities, the procedure developed to switch between 4LGS and 3LGS mode, and the performance characterization of the MUSE-NFM AO degraded mode.
ESO’s VLT interferometer (VLTI) is a general-user optical/infrared interferometric facility. Its operations scheme is fully integrated into the well-established scheme of all VLT instruments and profits enormously from this experience and the implemented infrastructure to offer a unique service to the community. Based on the greatly improved capabilities of the 2nd generation VLTI instruments and taking advantage of a further development of ESO’s Observation Handling Tools, we have evolved the VLTI operations scheme as well. We have offered to VLTI investigators the possibility to indicate baseline configurations in a more flexible way and have introduced nested scheduling containers to better formalize the observational strategy. We have prepared for dedicated support of different types of interferometric observations. For imaging observations specifically, we have introduced an improved workflow to fill the uv plane and to handle time-critical imaging.
ESO’s La Silla Paranal Observatory uses a set of integrated tools for preparation and execution of Service and Visitor Mode (SM and VM, respectively) observations. The web interface for the observation preparation (p2) provides a versatile and robust environment for users to efficiently design their observations. The software architecture of p2 enabled implementation of new services, modeled according to the instruments’ specifications and operational standards. The automatic creation of Finding Charts is integrated within p2 and the Observation Preparation (ObsPrep) tool enables interactive observing strategy configuration including for example fine-tuning of the science field pointings, selection of blind offset and guide stars as well as selection of auxiliary stars for instruments using Adaptive Optics. Through the Visitor Execution Sequence, observers can plan and monitor in real-time their (on-site or remote) observations. For Service Mode runs the use of scheduling containers, recently extended to include nesting of containers, enables design of complex observing strategies that are machine readable, which allows programmatic preparation of short term scheduling for execution and planning of the night at the observatory.
Until recently, users of ESO’s Very Large Telescope had to prepare Observing Blocks (OBs) with a standalone desktop tool. Tool support for automated OB mass production was mostly limited to imaging public surveys. Furthermore, there was no connection between the OB preparation software and other ancillary tools, such as Exposure Time Calculators, finding chart preparation software, and observatory schedule, meaning that users had to re-type the same information in several tools, and could design observations that would be incompatible with the Service Mode schedule. To address these shortcomings, we have implemented a new programming interface (API) and a state-of-the-art web application which provide observers with unprecedented flexibility and promote the usage of instrument and science-case specific tools, from small scripts to full-blown user interfaces. In this paper, we describe the software architecture of our solution, important design concepts and the technology stack adopted. We report on first user experience in both Visitor and Service Mode. We discuss tailored API programming examples, solving specific user requirements, and explain API usage scenarios for the next generation of ESO instruments. Finally, we describe the future evolution of our new approach.
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