(quasi-)remote observing pros ● travel cost ● transit time ● scheduling flexibility ●...

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(Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros Travel Cost Transit Time Scheduling Flexibility Increase faculty & students participation Cons Telescope Separation anxiety Increase involvement of observatory staff Data transfer

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Page 1: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

(Quasi-)Remote Observing

Pros● Travel Cost● Transit Time● Scheduling Flexibility● Increase faculty &

students participation

Cons● Telescope Separation

anxiety● Increase involvement

of observatory staff● Data transfer

Page 2: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

(Quasi-)Remote Observing

Requirements● Instrument/Science-Program independent● Communication

– Real time instrument control– Field acquisition

● Real time, local access to “science critical” data

● No decrease in observing efficiency

Page 3: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

A Test Case(How not to let an earth quake get in your way of science)

●9 slit positions●Diffuse object, no point sources●Variable, unknown exposure times

–emission lines with 3 dex range in intensity

Page 4: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

Observing with MagE

Page 5: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

Remote Instrument Computer Desktop

Automated Local Data Display

Automated Data Transfer

IRAF

Page 6: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

Observing with MIKE

Page 7: (Quasi-)Remote Observing Pros ● Travel Cost ● Transit Time ● Scheduling Flexibility ● Increase faculty & students participation Cons ● Telescope Separation

Conclusions●Remote participation with Skype-desktop sharing - limited but extremely useful

–Skype proved very stable●Remote desktop control using Mac screen sharing - demonstrated to work in real time

●VNC – Basis for Mac screen sharing, but requires additional software at LCO

●Local access to “science critical” in real time demonstrated WITH OUT loss of efficency