APT Analysis of Scheduling Constraints
Below are step-by-step instructions for analyzing the schedulability
of your program. For a demonstration using a specific example, see the
training movie (http://www.stsci.edu/hst/proposing/apt/using_apt).
- Use the plots and tables available on the HST Two Gyro Science Mode
Web Page to
make an initial determination of the schedulability of your
observations. Note that the models for orientation and visibility should be
the same on the web page and in APT.
- If you require a specific, fixed Orientation, check the scheduling
impact of providing the broadest possible (within scientific
contraints) orientation range for your observation.
- If you require a non-specific, fixed Orientation (e.g. you are
mosaicking a large field, and the orientation is strictly to align the
tiles), then use the Orientation plots to estimate the optimal
Orientations (e.g. for a mosaic, +90, +180, and +270 may be
acceptable) that provide the maximum schedulability.
- On the Observation page, fill in the relevant scheduling
requirements (on PRIME observations only; observations with the CPAR
flag set can use the "No Scheduling Constraints" option) as defined in
the Call for Proposals; fill in both the 2 and 3 gyro sections. If
you have observations of the same target/configuration that need to
occur at different epochs, then you must include a separate
observation for each epoch (with the appropriate scheduling
requirements).
The following steps should be performed for FIXED TARGET observations
only.
- After entering any scheduling requirements, select the 2-Gyro
Planner from the main Toolbar (with the Observation of interest
selected in the Hierarchical (Tree) editor); if you wish to process
the observation under 3-Gyro operations, select the 3-Gyro Planner.
Note that if you link observations with the AFTER OBSERVATION BY, then
selecting any one of those observations will cause the Planner to
process all linked observations together (since all observations impact the
total schedulability). Also, selecting the Observations container will
select ALL observations for processing.
After initialization, press the Update Display button to process the
observation. Note that the Orbital Visibility, Shadow, and Low
Sky requirements are not taken into account during Phase I processing.
They will, however, impact processing in Phase II.
- The Planner will display the Total Visibility for the Observation
Block. A green check means the observation is schedulable at some time
during the year, while the red x means the observation is NOT
schedulable at any time. You can examine the details by clicking on
the key to the left of the green check/red x. These details include:
-
Target Visibility - shows when the target is visible
-
Absolute Orient - shows when the specified orientation is available
-
Between - shows the specified scheduling window
-
Timing Link - shows when timing links (i.e. AFTER OBSERVATION BY) are schedulable
If the Observation Block is schedulable, placing the cursor on the
black/grey areas in the timeline will provide a tooltip with the exact
dates that are available, while placing the cursor in the white areas
will show when the observations are not schedulable. Note the
different colors/heights in the Planner graphics. These represent
times when the observation is schedulable at high (>30 minutes of
science time) visibility (black, full height) and low (<30 minutes of
science time) visibility (grey, half height). As noted in the Call
for Proposals, observations that use low visibility scheduling need to
be justified scientifically in the proposal.
- If the Observation is not schedulable, then examination of the
details will reveal which scheduling requirements are inconsistent
(e.g. the absolute ORIENT conflicts with the target visibility).
Revise the scheduling requirements to make the observation
schedulable, or in some rare cases, you may need to select a different
target (if possible).
- If any changes have been made to the scheduling requirements, press
the Update Display button to get an updated timeline.
- You can see a summary report for your proposal (for all observations
that have been processed through the 2-Gyro (and 3-Gyro) Planner) by
clicking on the Suitability Report. This report can be useful in
preparing your Strategy for 2-Gyro Observations (and for Large
and Treasury proposals, the required schedulability analysis).