The LSST operations simulator

F Delgado, A Saha…�- …�for Astronomy VI, 2014 - spiedigitallibrary.org
F Delgado, A Saha, S Chandrasekharan, K Cook, C Petry, S Ridgway
Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for�…, 2014spiedigitallibrary.org
The Operations Simulator for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST; http://www. lsst.
org) allows the planning of LSST observations that obey explicit science driven observing
specifications, patterns, schema, and priorities, while optimizing against the constraints
placed by design-specific opto-mechanical system performance of the telescope facility, site
specific conditions as well as additional scheduled and unscheduled downtime. It has a
detailed model to simulate the external conditions with real weather history data from the�…
The Operations Simulator for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST; http://www.lsst.org) allows the planning of LSST observations that obey explicit science driven observing specifications, patterns, schema, and priorities, while optimizing against the constraints placed by design-specific opto-mechanical system performance of the telescope facility, site specific conditions as well as additional scheduled and unscheduled downtime. It has a detailed model to simulate the external conditions with real weather history data from the site, a fully parameterized kinematic model for the internal conditions of the telescope, camera and dome, and serves as a prototype for an automatic scheduler for the real time survey operations with LSST. The Simulator is a critical tool that has been key since very early in the project, to help validate the design parameters of the observatory against the science requirements and the goals from specific science programs. A simulation run records the characteristics of all observations (e.g., epoch, sky position, seeing, sky brightness) in a MySQL database, which can be queried for any desired purpose. Derivative information digests of the observing history are made with an analysis package called Simulation Survey Tools for Analysis and Reporting (SSTAR). Merit functions and metrics have been designed to examine how suitable a specific simulation run is for several different science applications. Software to efficiently compare the efficacy of different survey strategies for a wide variety of science applications using such a growing set of metrics is under development. A recent restructuring of the code allows us to a) use "look-ahead" strategies that avoid cadence sequences that cannot be completed due to observing constraints; and b) examine alternate optimization strategies, so that the most efficient scheduling algorithm(s) can be identified and used: even few-percent efficiency gains will create substantive scientific opportunity. The enhanced simulator is being used to assess the feasibility of desired observing cadences, study the impact of changing science program priorities and assist with performance margin investigations of the LSST system.
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