Fifth NASA Space Weather and Robotic Mission Operations Workshop Joseph C. Hunt Jr. Spitzer Deputy Mission Manger / Flight Director September 25, 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Near-Earth Object Camera NEOCam Amy Mainzer.
Advertisements

A Search for Earth-size Planets Borucki – Page 1 KEPLER; Data Validation and Follow Up Observations CoRoT Symposium W.J. Borucki & the Kepler Team 5 February.
The Big Bang Theory. Time begins The universe begins ~13.7 Billion years ago The universe begins as the size of a single atom The universe began as a.
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Dwarf Planets Sun Eris Pluto Ceres By Michelle Stephens.
The Great Space Telescopes A Deeper Look Into Space Presented By Stevan Akerley 3/31, Rescheduled to April 29, 2014 National Space Society Space Ambassador.
SPITZER SPACE TELESCOPE. The Rationale for Infrared Astronomy reveal cool states of matter reveal cool states of matter explore the hidden Universe.
“PLANET AND GALAXY WE LIVE…” Presentation M. Filonenko K. Tusov School 1173, Form 9E GUIDANCE – Markova S.A.
Galaxies and the Universe
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Stardust NExT Tim Larson, Project Manager EPOXI.
MEPAG National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California Presentation to MEPAG.
Ch Viewing the Universe
CXC Chandra X-ray Observatory Operations. CXC Overview 1. Mission and Observatory Description 2. Chandra Operations 3. Chandra X-ray Center Architecture.
NASA Living with a Star Program Targeted Research & Technology Steering Committee NASA HQ & LWS TR&T Update September 16, 2008 Doug Rowland On Detail to.
WISE Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer asteroids Galaxy ULIRGs brown dwarfs WISE will map the sky in infrared light, searching for the nearest and coolest.
Constellation Orion Visible Light Constellation Orion Infrared Light.
Introduction to Spitzer and some applications Data products Pipelines Preliminary work K. Nilsson, J.M. Castro Cerón, J.P.U. Fynbo, D.J. Watson, J. Hjorth.
The Universe in the Infrared What is the Spitzer Space Telescope, and how does it work? Funded by NASA’s Spitzer Science Center Images courtesy NASA/JPL.
The James Webb Space Telescope. Introduction The James Webb Space Telescope  The James Webb Space Telescope, also called Webb or JWST, is a large, space-based.
Introducing Astronomy Education into High School Physics Curriculum Through the Use of the University of North Dakota Observatory Caitlin Nolby Space Studies.
Introduction of Space Technology. The James Webb Space Telescope The James Webb Space Telescope was previously known as the Next Generation Space Telescope.
Infrared Telescopes 1.
Final Version Wes Ousley Dan Nguyen May 13-17, 2002 Micro-Arcsecond Imaging Mission, Pathfinder (MAXIM-PF) Thermal.
Solar System J. Wunderlich, Ph.D. Image from
Overview of Astronomy AST 200. Astronomy Nature designs the Experiment Nature designs the Experiment Tools Tools 1) Imaging 2) Spectroscopy 3) Computational.
Space Exploration- Tools
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY NASA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER ORBITAL SCIENCES CORPORATION NASA AMES RESEARCH CENTER SPACE TELESCOPE SCIENCE INSTITUTE.
Van Allen Probes Spacecraft Operations July 29, 2015 Kristin Fretz
Spitzer Space Telescope Lisa Storrie-Lombardi Spitzer Science Center, Manager & Asst. Director for Community Affairs Implementing Portals of the Universe:
Rachel Weintraub Public Affairs Officer & TV Producer NASA Goddard Space Flight Center More information:
STEREO - Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory Mission STEREO STEREO Science Team Meeting May 2, 2005 Presented by Edward Reynolds APL STEREO Project.
The Solar System Chapter 6 COPY DOWN THE LEARNING GOALS ON PG SKIP 5 LINES BETWEEN EACH!
FIRST/Planck 12 December 2000PT The FIRST Mission Implementation Status and Schedule T. Passvogel The Promise of FIRST.
A Search for Earth-size Planets Borucki – Page 1 Roger Hunter (Ames Research Center) & Kepler Team March 26, 2010.
Jenam 2010 Exoplanet Targets for Upcoming Cosmic Visions Space Missions James Frith September 8 th 2010 University of Hertfordshire.
SAS ‘05 Reducing Software Security Risk through an Integrated Approach David P. Gilliam, John D. Powell Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute.
Lecture 33 The Solar System. The Inner Planets. The Solar System Overview Terrestrial Planets Chapter 16.1  16.8.
STEREO Science Center Status Report William Thompson NASA Goddard Space Flight Center STEREO SWG April 2008 Meudon, France.
Weak Lensing from Space with SNAP Alexandre Refregier (IoA) Richard Ellis (Caltech) David Bacon (IoA) Richard Massey (IoA) Gary Bernstein (Michigan) Tim.
A105 Stars and Galaxies  Homework #4 due today  Telescopes  Read unit 30 for next week  News Quiz Tuesday  First Exam on Sept. 28 Today’s APODAPOD.
Space Science MO&DA Programs - October Page 1 SS Evidence for Mass Fractionation in the Isotopic Composition of Solar Energetic Particles Although.
TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents: Mission Overview Timeline Scientific Objectives Spacecraft Launch Vehicle Equipment Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope.
Future Space Plans By: Kean R. Tagbo
Juno Mission To Jupiter NASA New Frontiers Program Launch Date: Aug. 5, 11:34 a.m. EDT Launch Period: Aug. 5 – 26 (~60 min window) Launch Vehicle: Atlas.
WBL - 1 Observation Planning Workshop, Pasadena, CA 3-4 June 2010 Herschel Observer Support Overview William B. Latter NHSC Deputy Director.
A Search for Earth-size Planets Borucki – Page 1 W.J. Borucki & Kepler Team (NASA Ames Research Center) NASA Academy 14 July 2010.
Thessaloniki, Oct 3rd 2009 Cool dusty galaxies: the impact of the Herschel mission Michael Rowan-Robinson Imperial College London.
Kaiya and Avery. Expectations  1990’s- $2.2 billion  With new infrared detecting technology and research into cryogenic systems and orbits, currently.
Spitzer Space Telescope
J. Marr - 1 SIM MMR Space Interferometry Mission A NASA Origins Mission SIM 5/14/2004 Project Summary National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet.
The Universe in the Infrared How do astronomers use Spitzer and what do they do with the data? Funded by NASA’s Spitzer Science Center Images courtesy.
FIRST LIGHT A selection of future facilities relevant to the formation and evolution of galaxies Wavelength Sensitivity Spatial resolution.
Introduction: Goals for JWST Transit Meeting C. Beichman Jonathan Lunine March 11, 2014.
The Search for Another Earth Exoplanets and the Kepler Spacecraft.
The Submillimeter Array 1 David J. Wilner
Instrument, Data Reduction, and Preliminary Results DU Graduate Student Colloquium Kathy Geise Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Spitzer Space Telescope Mww-1 Warm Spitzer and Astrobiology Presented to NASA Astrobiology Institute Planetary System Formation Focus Group Michael Werner.
Workshop on Science Associated with the Lunar Exploration Architecture - Earth Science Subcommittee Theme: A Lunar-Based Earth Observatory Science Observations.
& Eric P. Smith HST/JWST Program Scientist Astrophysics Division NASA Headquarters.
The Kepler Mission S. R. Kulkarni.
Pulkkinen, A., M. Kuznetsova, Y. Zheng, L. Mays and A. Wold
Mark Proctor, 31 August, 2017.
Observing the parallax effect due to gravitational lensing with OSIRIS
GLAST Large Area Telescope:
The Spitzer Space Telescope By Vinay Patel.
A Galaxy Revealed in Multiple Wavelengths
Scientific Mission Applications
First Assessments of EUVI Performance on STEREO SECCHI
Launch and On-orbit Checkout
Main information on the «WORLD SPACE OBSERVATORY» project
CHEOPS - CHaracterizing ExOPlanet Satellite
Presentation transcript:

Fifth NASA Space Weather and Robotic Mission Operations Workshop Joseph C. Hunt Jr. Spitzer Deputy Mission Manger / Flight Director September 25, 2013 Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology 4800 Oak Grove Drive Pasadena, CA USA National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology

2 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Project Overview NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope Celebrates 10 Years in Space Ten years after a Delta II rocket launched NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, lighting up the night sky over Cape Canaveral, Fla., the fourth of the agency's four Great Observatories continues to illuminate the dark side of the cosmos with its infrared eyes. Key Features Class: B Category: 2 Heliocentric orbit trailing the Earth 85 cm Beryllium telescope operating at 26K Launch date: August 25, 2003 Spitzer warm mission began July 27, 2009 Warm Mission expected Operational life at least 7.5 years Observing time avail. to general community: 100%

Page - 3 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology (Current Orbit Information) Spitzer is in a heliocentric, Earth-trailing orbit. It follows the Earth around the Sun. Its orbit is slightly more elliptical than the Earth’s, and most of the time it is farther away from the Sun than the Earth is, so it slowly recedes from Earth at about 0.1 AU/yr. –Current Orbit Information (Geocentric) Distance = 176,604,279 km (~1.181 AU) One-way light time = s (~9 m:49 s) Right Ascension (EME J2000) = deg Declination (EME J2000) = deg

Page - 4 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Instruments Three science instruments  IRAC – Infrared Array Camera o Bands: 3.6 µm, 4.5 µm, 5.8 µm, and 8.0 µm  MIPS – Multi-band Imaging Photometer o Bands: 24 µm, 70 µm, and 160 µm  IRS – Infrared Spectrometer o Bands: 5.2 µm – 14.5 µm, 9.9 µm – 19.6 µm, 14.0 µm – 38.0 µm, and 18.7 µm – 37.2 µm In the Cryogenic Mission, only one instrument was on at a time for a sequence duration of one to three weeks.  Primary mirror operates between 5.6 K and 12 K. In the extended Warm Mission, only two bands of IRAC, 3.6 µm and 4.5 µm, will produce valid science data.  Primary mirror operates at ~26 K

Page - 5 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Mission Overview The Spitzer Space telescope was launched on 25 August 2003 with a prime Cryogenic Mission Requirement of five years. The helium depleted on 15 May 2009, ending the prime mission which started the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) Warm Mission. Second phase of extended mission - (FY ‘11 and FY ‘12). As of August 2012 Spitzer completed 9 years of Science Operations. Third phase of extended mission - (FY ‘13 and FY ’14). A Forth extended mission phase will be proposed spring 2014 for (FY’15 and FY’16)

6 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Science Overview To study the properties of extrasolar planets and search for super-earths around nearby solar-type stars To study galaxies as they were when the Universe was less than 1 Gyr old, and to understand how galaxies and clusters of galaxies have evolved with cosmic time. To complete the census of the Galaxy for young stars, star forming regions and dusty post-main sequence stars, and search for new classes of brown dwarfs and super-planets. To determine the cosmic distance scale in the local Universe with unprecedented precision by the first systematic application of mid-infrared observations to this critical problem.

7 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology 10 Years Science Utilization Statistics Currently for Spitzer: Unique PIs: 859, **Non-unique** CoIs: 11,512 Count of Science Program AORs executed thru 26 Aug 2013: 82,915 AORs Science Time executed thru 26 Aug 2013: 67,900 hours Science time lost, all causes: 53 days (49 days Cryo mission, 4 days Warm mission) equals 1.5% of the science time available over 10 years Public affairs statistics: As of 8/22/2013, there have been 432 press releases/web news features posted on the Spitzer website over the course of the mission. Of these, 182 were NASA-led press releases. On the Spitzer website (spitzer.caltech.edu), in 2012 for example, we had, on average each month: 146,000 unique visitors 660,000 visits 2.3 million pages viewed 4000 GB of data (images, videos, etc) downloaded from the site Publication Statistics: Over 5000 papers in the Spitzer bibliographical data base, which includes only refereed publications, as opposed to conference presentations or posters. That is more than one per day, given our 3650 day life time.

Page - 8 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Ground Segment Requirements Launch and Cryo Science Mission Phase The Ground Segment, using both local and telemetry information, shall decide the time at which the Observatory is to resume science operations after a solar flare –real-time or stored sequence commands to accomplish this. The Ground Segment shall recognize and respond to a solar flare event within 12 hours occurrence –powering off non-essential loads as necessary to minimize radiation effects. (For impacts to the IRS and MIPS due to common electronics) Warm Mission Science Phase Monitor and annotate for S/C performance impacts and degraded science. –No real-time actions required from the ground

Page - 9 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Current Space Weather Monitor Sources GOES –NOAA Alerts GSFC SWRC-Space-Weather-Research-Center –SWRC Alerts –SWRC Model with Spitzer’s coordinates –SWRC Summary Reports

Page - 10 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Current Space Weather Monitor Process Receive Alert Annotate Master ISA & Logs Observe Impact N Y End * S/C & Inst. Analysis Update ISA End Note: * Analysis results may require Special Flight Engineering review

Page - 11 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology MASTER ISA FORMAT ISA #51348 Master ISA for space weather related events. –Two types of entries Events with a weather alert message Events without an alert message. Event label format is "(Item Number) SWE_yyyy-mmdd_DOY“ or "(Item Number) NSE_yyyy-mmdd_DOY“ –Item Number is a two digit number beginning 01 in parentheses. Allows for easier traceability from Description to Analysis –SWE is short for Space Weather Alert Event –NSE is short for Non Alert Space Weather Event –yyyy is the year of the weather alert message –mmdd is the month and day of the weather alert message –DOY is the Day of Year for the weather alert message. In this ISA the "Description of Incident" contains the weather alert message information while all data analysis information is documented in the "Analysis and Impact" section of this ISA).

Page - 12 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Master Space Weather Summary

Page - 13 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Master Space Weather Summary

Page - 14 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Categories of Spitzer’s Space Weather Impacts Mass Memory Card (MMC) Soft Scrub Errors The EDAC continues to correct for single bit errors due to background radiation. The corrections are summed by the ratio of corrupted bits over time. (No functional impact to the Observatory or Science) Power/Solar Array Panel Continuous trending provides performance statics for the output power. All deviations are correlated and disposition. (No functional impact to the Observatory or Science) Star Tracker STA component-level fault protection utilizes a series of checks to test the component health. We set a value to monitor the counter for fault persistence. (No functional impact to the Observatory or Science) Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) Radhits Based on the instrument exposure time the nominal observed Radhits are 4 per second with very little scatter (No functional impact to the Instrument, however Loss of 69.6 hours Science for event on DOY 067/2012).

Page - 15 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Since the Spacecraft continues to slowly recede from Earth at about 0.1 AU/yr, we constantly re-evaluate the contingency plan and use other data to augment GSFC-SWRC, GOES and STEREO data.  Spacecraft or IRAC instrument parameters may be used to assess space weather events. Routine training sessions between the user community of the Space Weather Analysis Tool could further assist Flight Projects for space weather impacts. An online subscription tool for the alert notification would streamline the process.  See example flow diagram Summary

Page - 16 September 15, 2011 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Fill In Template History/Summary Report Data Base User Input (form) Template Notification Event Missions (Activity ID) STB STA Spitzer Juno … T02:48:00-CME T02:48:00-CME T02:48:00-CME-001 n T02:48:00-CME-001

Page - 17 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Event Summary Request GSFC-SWRC Pre populated Template (all times in UTC) Message ID: ?? - AL- ?? Activity ID: (e.g., CME, SEP) Type:(O, M, etc.) Object:(S/C, Planet, etc.) Time of Impact: Predicted:(Supplied by Model) Actual:(Filled in by user) Observed Effects: (User supplied by selected devices - all times in UTC) Spacecraft Instrument Attachments (e.g., graph, plot or table)

Page - 18 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology The analysis described in this paper was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. A large number of people from the Spitzer project, support organizations at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Lockheed Martin Space System Company, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Space Weather Research Center ( SWRC ), NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center and the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology contributed to the operations described herein. Special Thanks: Kennis Stowers – JPL Patrick Lowrance – SSC Sean Carey – SSC Andrzej Stewart - LMA

Page - 19 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Back-up Material

Page - 20 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology MMC Soft Scrub Errors EI-006 SWE_ _148

Page - 21 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology MMC Soft Scrub Errors EI-002 SWE_ _067

Page - 22 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Solar Array Panel EI-004 SWE_ _106

Page - 23 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Star Tracker EI-006 SWE_ _148 STA Reset

Page - 24 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology IRAC Instrument Radhits EI-002 SWE_ _067

Page - 25 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Spitzer Observatory Telescope The primary mirror is 85 cm in diameter and made of beryllium. The field-of-view angle of the telescope is 32′ (32 arcminutes). The focal length is 10.2 m. The total mass of the spacecraft at launch was 950 kg, including 50.4 kg of liquid helium cryogen.

Page - 26 September 25, 2013 Spitzer Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Back-up material In 1998, the science objectives for the Spitzer mission were defined as: –Deep surveys of oldest galaxies –Evolution and structure of ultra-luminous galaxies and quasars –Search for Brown Dwarfs –Evolution of stellar disks and planetary systems For the extended warm, IRAC-only mission, the new science objectives are: –Study properties of extra-solar planets –Study galaxies during the first one billion years after the Big Bang –Complete census of the galaxy for young stars –Determine cosmic distance scale in the local universe –Asteroid Hunter ?