The Australian National University (ANU) has transitioned the operation of its 2.3-meter telescope from classical remote observing to fully autonomous queue-scheduled observing. The new control system, implemented in March 2023, supports the existing Wide Field Spectrograph (WiFeS) instrument and enables flexible queue scheduling as well as rapid response for Target-of-Opportunity (ToO) observations.
The key design requirements for the automated system were to support the established modes of operation for the WiFeS instrument, enable near-instantaneous ToO override, implement autonomous queue scheduling, and ensure robust self-preservation. The system uses a modular and distributed architecture, with the Observation Controller process coordinating the activities of the various Instrument Control System (ICS) components. The Scheduler manages the observation queues and selects the highest-ranked observation based on a complex multivariate ranking metric.
The acquisition process uses a two-stage approach to refine the telescope's pointing, first aligning the field with a star catalog and then performing an iterative correction on the user-selected acquisition star. The control system also implements auto-recovery mechanisms to handle common transient hardware faults.
In the first six months of operation, the automated system has completed 3,377 science observations, with 13 scheduled as ToO observations, totaling 943 hours on target. The system has consistently outperformed human observers in terms of observing efficiency, with the most efficient night being achieved under automated operation.
The project to automate the 2.3-meter telescope was completed in 36 months, with most of the software development done in the first two years. The use of comprehensive and semi-realistic simulators for the ICS components was critical to the success of the project, enabling extensive end-to-end testing and efficient use of the limited on-site testing time.
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by Ian Price, J... às arxiv.org 10-01-2024
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