STIS can be used to observe simultaneously with ACS, COS, NICMOS, WFC3, or FGS. Figure 3.2 shows the HST field of view following the installation of COS and WFC3 during the HST Servicing Mission 4. The three infrared cameras of NICMOS (which themselves could be operated in parallel), STIS, ACS, COS, and WFC3 are shown, with their fields of view drawn to scale, in their relative focal plane positions. The three STIS cameras share a common field of view; only one can be used at a time.
If STIS is used as the secondary instrument in coordinated parallel observations, the STIS exposures cannot contain both external and internal exposures. Assuming the first exposure is external, all STIS exposures will be declared external. Therefore no internal exposures are allowed. This includes any user specified internals, such as fringe flat fields, as well as automatic internals, such as auto-wavecals. If STIS is used as the prime instrument, this restriction does not apply.
For coordinated parallels where STIS is prime, automatic wavecals occur during the visibility period - not during occultation. Since many CCD observations request CR-SPLITs, in general, this is not an impact for STIS CCD coordinated parallels. However for long MAMA exposures, auto-wavecals that would have occurred during occultation in the absence of coordinated parallels are now shifted into the visibility period. This reduces the time available for science exposures. In addition, the buffer management overhead associated with the last MAMA science exposure now occurs prior to the auto-wavecal, further reducing the time available on target.
The MAMA detectors cannot be used for pure parallel observing. For Cycle 24, coordinated parallels will
not be allowed with STIS MAMA imaging modes and the STIS
NUV-MAMA PRISM mode. However, coordinated parallels will be allowed with other STIS MAMA spectroscopic modes, provided that an explicit
ORIENT is specified and precise RA and Dec coordinates for the parallel field are given. The MAMA detectors are subject to bright object protection limits; see
Section 2.8.