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This page provides the general information necessary to complete the
Phase 2 Preparation Process for Service Mode programmes at the VLT and the
ESO-MPI 2.2m telescope.
This information has been updated for Period 81. Period 80 users
(including the authors of Director's Discretionary Time proposals approved
during Period 80) should continue to follow the
Period 80 procedures.
Please note that these instructions apply only to programmes having
obtained Service Mode time at the VLT or at the ESO-MPI 2.2m telescope.
Investigators whose programmes have been scheduled in Service Mode at
the NTT or the 3.6m telescopes should consult the
Instructions for Phase 2 preparation of Service Mode runs with those
telescopes instead.
Important note for Principal Investigators having obtained Service
Mode time with APEX: The Phase 2 preparation for APEX is done via a
webpage (http://www.apex-telescope.org/observations/observing/preparing.html).
Questions about these procedures should be directed to Dr Carlos
De Breuck (cdebreuc at eso.org).
More general information about
Philosophy and Scheduling of Service Mode Observing
is also available.
The deadline for Phase 2 submission is:
Thursday, 14 February 2008, at 12:00
Central European Time
Please note that late submission penalties apply: if the Phase 2 material is submitted after the deadline without prior agreement with ESO, the run shall have its Priority Group reduced automatically by one class (A to B, B to C, C to canceled).
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For FLAMES users: final dates for the GIRAFFE CCD upgrade have now been finalized. FLAMES will be off-line for 2 months, between mid March and mid May. Further details can be found on the FLAMES P2PP SM page.
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Release of the ESO User Portal: starting in mid-November, users
who still need to submit OBs (late submissions, follow-up spectroscopy,
DDT submissions, etc.) must use Version 2.13 of P2PP, which is User
Portal compliant. To log into P2PP you use your ESO User
Portal credentials (password is case-sensitive for P2PP). Please consult the
User Portal FAQ
for more information.
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Procedure for target or instrument setup change request:
starting with this Phase 2, a new web form will be provided to
request changes to your approved list of targets, or to your preselected
instrument setups. This form will allow ESO to handle your requests
more rapidly and more efficiently.
This new
Target/Instrument Setup Web Form
was released on Monday, 2 July 2007 .
- Before you start...: Please check the following points:
- You know your ESO User Portal username and password. Your User
Portal username and password are the same ones you use for other
things like checking the Webletters, etc. Please consult the
User Portal FAQ
for more information.
- You have installed the latest versions of
P2PP and any relevant
instrument-specific preparation tools (FIMS, NAOS PS,
FPOSS, VMMPS, Guidecam).
- You may need to submit some Phase 2 Waiver
Requests. Waiver requests need to be approved by ESO before
the phase 2 deadline, and thus need to be submitted at least
one week before the deadline.
- The phase 2 package consists of:
A set of Observation Blocks (OBs), constructed and submitted to the ESO database using the latest version of the P2PP tool. Note that the OBs now include both finding charts and, when applicable (i.e. for moving target observations), ephemeris files.
- A README file providing an overview
of your programme details, also prepared and submitted from within
P2PP.
- Once the submission is complete:
- Do not forget to click the p2pp-submit button in P2PP! This step has to be repeated for every observing run for which you are submitting Phase 2 material.
Please be reminded that your Phase 2 package submission,
re-submission, or modification will not be processed until
you have notified to ESO the completion of your submission using this
button.
All investigators assigned Service Mode time should contact
the ESO User Support Department in all
matters regarding Phase 2 preparation (please include the programme ID in the
subject line).
All investigators assigned Visitor Mode time
should contact the Visiting Astronomers
Department or the Science Operations Groups on
Paranal or La Silla.
The USD list of
Frequently Asked Questions
provides answers to some of the most common inquiries related to
the preparation of Service Mode Observations.
Both Visitor and Service Mode programmes are carried out at all ESO telescopes
by executing Observation Blocks (OBs) provided by the users. OBs are
constructed and submitted to ESO using the
Phase 2 Proposal Preparation (P2PP) tool. Please
refer to the P2PP User Manual and to the
User Manuals of the different instruments for more specific information on
the structure and contents of OBs, and how to build OBs for different
instruments. A number of Tutorials
describing step-by-step the construction of OBs for different instruments is
available.
Also, please note that instrument-specific guidelines for
AMBER,
CRIRES,
FLAMES,
FORS1/2,
HAWK-I,
ISAAC,
MIDI,
NACO,
SINFONI,
UVES,
VIMOS,
VISIR,
FEROS, and
WFI
must be carefully taken into account.
There are also generic auxiliary tools
useful for Proposal preparation, both at Phase 1 and Phase 2.
It is important to keep in mind the following rules and guidelines when
designing a Service Mode programme or when preparing a Phase 2 package:
- Some observing strategies cannot be supported in Service Mode;
in particular, real-time decisions about the sequencing of OBs, complex OB
sequencing, or decisions based on the outcome of previously executed OBs
(like adjustment of integration times or execution of some OBs instead of
others).
- OBs are only executed once. If you want to repeat an
identical observation multiple times, you must submit multiple OBs.
This requirement applies to standard stars as well.
- OBs are normally executed non-contiguously. Since efficient
Service Mode operations require continuous flexibility to best match
the OB constraints with actual observing conditions, OBs for a given
programme are normally scheduled non-contiguously. Therefore, users should
not expect their OBs to be executed on a specific sequence or in a
linked way, unless a sound scientific justification (to be approved with
a Phase 2 Waiver and indicated in the
README file) exists. Exceptions to this rule are
cases in which one OB observing a calibrations source needs to be executed
contiguously to a science OB.
- Multi-mode, multi-configuration OBs are normally not permitted in
Service Mode. Although multiple configurations within one OB may
sometimes reduce overheads, scheduling and calibrating such OBs is extremely
inefficient and can increase the calibration load to an unsustainable level.
Examples of such multi-configuration OBs are those combining imaging and
spectroscopy in a single OB, spectroscopy with multiple grisms or
central wavelength settings, or imaging with a large number of filters.
Multiconfiguration OBs are accepted only if duly justified and authorized
by means of a Phase 2 Waiver Request
- OB execution times must be below 1 hour. Long OBs are more
difficult to schedule and execute within the specified constraints because
of the unpredictable evolution of the observing conditions. For this reason,
OBs taking more than one hour to execute time are accepted by ESO only in
exceptional cases and provided that a Phase 2 Waiver
Request is submitted and approved. In such cases, ESO will consider the
OB successfully executed if the constraints were fulfilled during the first
hour of execution, even if conditions degrade after that time.
- User-provided calibration OBs that need to be executed
contiguously with science OBs need to be indicated in the User
comments entry of the relevant science OBs.
- Time constraints must be indicated in the OBs. If you
intend to observe time-critical events or monitor a target at specific
time windows, you need to indicate this under the Time
Intervals tab of the OBs. This information needs to be provided
also in the corresponding section of the README file. Specifying time
windows as broad as possible will reduce the possibilities that your OBs
are not executed because of higher priority programmes or because the
external conditions did not allow the observations during the interval
that you specified.
- Specify the weakest possible Constraint Set values. OBs that can
be executed under a broad range of conditions are easier to schedule,
especially if they belong to priority groups B or C. In particular, if
photometry is needed of a field, it is normally sufficient to obtain a short
integration under photometric conditions (transparency = PHOT) and
carry out the rest of the integration with OBs having a
transparency = CLR constraint.
- Instrument-specific information must be indicated in the OBs.
Information like the magnitude of the brightest star in the field
(ISAAC, HAWK-I),
the signal-to-noise ratio at a given wavelength (UVES), the magnitudes of
FACB and Guide Star (FLAMES) and so on, must be indicated in the
User Comments field of each OB.
The most commonly used observing configurations of each instrument are
calibrated by means of the Observatory's Calibration Plan. Calibration
Plans for each instrument and mode are described in detail in their
corresponding User Manual, and their execution times are not charged to
the Service Mode programmes.
Please check carefully in the User Manual whether or not the
instrument configurations that you plan to use are included in the
instrument's Calibration Plan. If this is not the case, you must provide
additional OBs for calibration appropriate for each mode not included in the
Calibration Plan, whose execution is then charged to your time allocation.
User-supplied OBs for calibration are only executed once.
You should assume that your science OBs will be executed completely
independently of each other, possibly on different nights, and take
into account that no user-supplied OB (for a science or a calibration
target) will be executed more than once. You should submit enough
OBs to cover that situation. For example, if you need to observe and
flux-calibrate six targets in a filter that is not supported in the
calibration plan of the instrument, you need to provide six OBs for
photometric calibration to allow for the case in which each target is
observed on a different night. This must be done even if the same
calibration star can be used for all the science targets.
Please indicate in the User Comments fields of Science OBs
when a user-provided calibration must be executed contiguously.
Please note that there are two separate kinds of calibrations in
operational terms:
- Calibrations that observe a reference celestial source, like a
spectrophotometric standard star or a nearly-featureless star for the
measurement of telluric lines. The OBs prepared for this kind of
calibrations are generically considered as normal OBs (to be prepared
under the OBsBlock tab in P2PP), and their construction is the
same as for other science OBs. However, depending of the instrument they
use either templates whose name contains the indicator calib, or
flags in the templates that indicate that the observation is intended for
calibration.
- Calibrations with no celestial source associated, like flat
fields taken with a flat field lamp or dark exposures. OBs for this kind
of calibrations should be prepared under the CalBlock tab in
P2PP, as no acquisition template needs to be specified in this case.
Calibrations to be executed in daytime are the most common examples in
this category.
To assist in scheduling and tracking your OBs efficiently, the following
prefixes must be used when naming OBs:
- PRE - pre-imaging OB (e.g. PRE Field A)
- ToO - Target of Opportunity OB (e.g. ToO GRB-1); see also
note below.
- MOV - Moving Target (i.e. solar system) OB (e.g. MOV TNO-43A)
- CAL - Calibration star (e.g. photometric, telluric, radial
velocity, polarization, etc) (e.g. CAL TNO-43A)
- sciMXU - FORS2 MXU
spectroscopic OB (e.g. sciMXU TNO-43A)
- PSF - NACO Point Spread
Function reference star (e.g. PSF Galactic Center)
Note: All observations belonging to a ToO
run must start with the ToO_ prefix, including those belonging to the
other categories mentioned above: for instance, an OB intended to
observe a star for calibration of a ToO science observation should have a
name starting with ToO_CAL_...
For OB time sequences, please name your OBs in such a way that the
sequence is obvious. Examples:
Field A - Night1
Field A - Night2
Field A - Night3
Field B - Baseline
Field B - Baseline + 1 week
Field B - Baseline + 2 weeks
Please use always a unique name for each of your OBs, even if they are
identical to each other. For example, a series of 3 identical OBs
on NGC 5128 may be called NGC5128-1, NGC5128-2,
NGC5128-3, instead of calling all three OBs NGC5128.
To ensure the observing efficiency and flexibility of
Service Mode observing, ESO has implemented a number of rules, procedures
and limitations on programmes scheduled for Service mode. Typically, these
have to do with OB construction, observing strategy, or instrument modes
available.
In some special cases it is possible to admit some justified
exceptions to these rules with a reduced operational impact. However,
it is necessary that the exceptions have been reviewed and authorized by
ESO well in advance. The Phase 2 Waiver Request procedure is the channel
to make this possible.
- OBs that will take longer than one hour to execute (except
AMBER observations with more than one spectral band)
- Sequences of OBs that need to be executed consecutively (with the
exception of science/calibration pairs). Please note that justifications
based on the reduction of execution overheads cannot be accepted,
as sequences of OBs decrease the flexibility of Service Mode observing and
thus the operational efficiency of the telescopes.
- OBs that contain multiple instrument configurations. As an
exception, multiple broad-band filters in a single OB can normally be
allowed. For FORS1/2 up to two interference filters may be used in a
single OB.
- Delayed submission of Phase 2 material needed. This is admissible only
under exceptional circumstances justified by scientific reasons, such as
the need to wait for the outcome of another observing run before preparing
the OBs. Users whose schedule prevents them from submitting their Phase 2
package by the due date are strongly encouraged to find a collaborator who
can do it, rather than submitting a waiver request, as ESO cannot guarantee
the prompt review and validation of Phase 2 packages submitted after the
Phase 2 deadline.
- FEROS: Attachment of Flat Field and/or Wavelength calibrations
to science OBs.
- FLAMES: If a guide star outside the 25 arcmin field of view has to
be selected.
- FLAMES: If the same fiber configuration must be always observed
in the same plate of the positioner.
- FORS1/2: Deviations from the Standard
Instrument Configurations published in the FORS page and in the FORS
Manual.
- HAWK-I: Observation of fields containing stars brighter than the
limits noted in the HAWK-I User Manual
- ISAAC: Observation of fields containing stars brighter than the
limits noted in the ISAAC User Manual
- ISAAC: Observations with the minimum Detector Integration
Time (DIT) value.
- NACO: Observations which will exceed the saturation limit by
more than a factor of two.
- SINFONI: Observations which require the use of
the SINFONI_ifs_acq_NGSfast acquisition template (used for stars which are brighter than 5-6th magnitude).
- UVES: Deviations from the Standard
Instrument Configurations published in the UVES page and in the UVES
Manual.
- VIMOS: Deviations from the
Standard
Instrument Configurations published in the VIMOS page.
- VIMOS: Preimaging and MOS observations with field orientation different from the default one (slits in the N-S direction)
- VIMOS: Pointings on positions separated by more than 30 arcsec on the sky
Waiver requests should be sent to
p2pp-waiver@eso.org.
The Subject
line of your e-mail should contain your ESO ObservingRun ID only.
Example:
Subject: 081.A-0123(B)
All Phase 2 procedure waiver requests must be approved by ESO before
Phase 2 package submission. Since a Waiver Request can take up to one
week to process, please make sure to submit more than one week before the
Phase 2 deadline. Waivers received less than five working days before
the submission deadline will normally be rejected.
All waiver requests should include:
- what technical requirement you wish to override
- a brief (one paragraph) technical and/or scientific justification
The README file contains an overview of the run, aspects specific to
it, and an instrument-dependent checklist.
The README file interface is accessible from the P2PP main GUI via either
the Readme button or the Readme menu at the top bar; see the
P2PP User Manual for a
detailed description. The README file has the following sections:
- A non-editable section giving basic information on the run as scheduled: the ID, instrument, priority class, approved execution time, type (normal,
large, guaranteed time, or director's discretionary time), and PI name.
- A list of sections accessible through tabs where specific aspects of
the run can be described:
- General Description: a short summary of observing
run, providing ESO with any information needed to meet your science
objective. Decision paths and/or OB modification requests that
depend on the outcome of previously executed OBs are not allowed.
- Waiver Requests: a short summary of any approved
Phase 2 waiver requests, including when they were
submitted and when they were approved.
- Critical Observing Conditions Constraints: any
information about required observing conditions that are
critical for the achievement of the goals of the project.
- Time-Critical Aspects: if your OBs must be executed within
specific time windows or in some time specific sequence, please
describe those constraints here. Note that in the case of specific
time windows, these need to be indicated also under the Time
Intervals information in the OB itself.
- Special Execution Requirements: any other requirements
regarding the execution of your run other than those indicated in the
previous sections, such as preferences on the relative completion of
OBs; for instance, if preference should be given to the completion of
all the OBs on a given target before proceeding with another target.
- Special Calibration Information: if you have submitted OBs for
calibration, please describe them here, why you have submitted them,
and how they should be executed relative to your science OBs (e.g.
same night, once per observing run, etc.). In particular, you
must provide the magnitude and spectral type for all user supplied
photometric or spectrophotometric calibration stars.
- ToO Information: please indicate here if this is a Target of
Opportunity run and give any special details.
- ToO Activators List: please give here the names of the
investigators who are authorized to trigger a Target of Opportunity
observation.
- Pre-Imaging Requirements: if this is a pre-imaging run, please
indicate it here and describe any special requirements; for instance
the need to obtain on- and off- observations in narrow-band filters
contiguously.
- An entry for the e-mail address of the Principal Investigator
of the programme. This ensures that this important piece of information is kept
updated in ESO's records. Please do not enter here any address other than
that of the Principal Investigator, even in the case that the person preparing
the Phase 2 package is not the PI.
- Estimated Total Execution Time: please include here the
execution time as given by the execution time report of P2PP.
- Is this a Pre-imaging run? this is a tick box that must be
checked if the run is pre-imaging for another run. This is important to ensure
that pre-imaging runs receive the due execution priority.
- In case the pre-imaging was required to prepare these OBs, you must indicate
the source of pre-imaging in the corresponding box. If the source is none
of those listed there, you can indicate the actual source in the entry below
it.
The last part of the README file is a check list including most of the relevant aspects related to Phase 2 preparation
with the corresponding instrument. You
must click either yes or N/A to ensure that you have taken all
these aspects into account.
Please read the P2PP User
Manual for a detailed description on attaching finding charts to OBs.
Finding charts must have all the following characteristics:
- Clearly indicate the Observing Run ID.
- Clearly indicate the PI Name.
- Clearly indicate the OB Name or Target Name, as
used in the OB to which it is attached.
- The entire instrument field-of-view must be shown.
- North and East must be clearly indicated.
- The scale must be indicated by drawing a bar and writing the
bar length in arcseconds or arcminutes.
- The wavelength range of the image must be indicated.
- The images should be negative, i.e. dark objects on light
background.
- The output files must be in JPEG format and their size
must be less than 1 Mbyte.
- The target(s) position(s) must be clearly indicated.
- Positions of spectroscopic acquisition reference stars, if
any, should be marked.
- Spectroscopic finding charts must indicate the slit(s)
position(s) clearly
- When appropriate, spectroscopic runs should attach two
finding charts to each OB: (1) full instrument field; and
(2) magnified image clearly identifying spectroscopic
targets
- Please check for additional instrument-specific requirements
in the Service Mode instructions for
AMBER,
CRIRES,
FLAMES,
FORS1/2,
ISAAC,
MIDI,
NACO,
SINFONI,
UVES,
VIMOS,
VISIR,
FEROS,
and WFI
Please verify that finding charts have sufficient quality and resolution.
This can be easily done from within P2PP by using the
View Finding Chart option in the Finding Charts menu of the main
P2PP interface (see also the
P2PP User Manual).
Although in most cases valid finding charts can be produced with any
software tool able to produce output files in JPEG format, ESO recommends
the use of the
SkyCat-based finding chart tool.
This tool provides a user-friendly interface to easily produce finding
charts with the general characteristics described above.
FORS FIMS users must generate their finding charts using the
FIMS tool.
VIMOS VMMPS users must generate their finding charts using the
VMMPS tool.
VIMOS imaging users users must generate their finding charts using
the GUIDECAM tool.
Whenever possible, finding charts should have similar central
wavelength to observations (e.g. DSS charts are often inappropriate
for IR observations near the galactic equator).
Once you have completed the preparation of your OBs and your README file, you
are ready to check them in the ESO Database. However, before doing it you
are strongly encouraged to use the verification facilities in P2PP.
The built-in verification facilities of P2PP ensure the compliancy of your
Phase 2 material with a number of Phase 2 policies, and also ensure that
all the mandatory sections of the README file have been filled in. These
checks will be automatically performed also at the time
of checking the Phase 2 material in the ESO Database, and non-compliant OBs or
README files will be rejected. However, it may take up to several minutes
before you receive the validation report generated at submission time
containing possible errors in the submitted material. You can thus save
much time by using the Verify utilities for OBs and README files
(see the P2PP User Manual),
which will perform the validation locally in your machine, before submission.
Please check your OBs and README file in the ESO Database only once
you have made sure that the verification process is passed.
In addition to the automated verification of OBs and README files, please
also check the quality of the attached finding charts by means of the finding
chart viewing facility of P2PP. Finding charts of deficient quality will be
rejected by ESO at the time of Phase 2 review and may delay the certification
process of your Phase 2 package.
All Service Mode OBs and README files must be submitted to the ESO Database
from P2PP. Finding charts and ephemeris files are attached to OBs and
automatically checked in the ESO database at the time of submitting the OBs.
Please refer to Section 6 of the
P2PP User Manual for a
detailed explanation on the steps to be followed to this end.
Note that the Check in option under the File menu submits
to the ESO Database only the OBs (and their components) that are highlighted
in the grid of the P2PP main GUI. The README file must be separately submitted
using the CheckIn Readme option under the Readme menu in the
P2PP main GUI.
Once your OBs have been successfully checked in the ESO Database, a lock
symbol will appear next to them. Likewise, once the README file is checked in
a lock symbol will be superimposed on the README icon in the P2PP main GUI
icon bar.
Your Phase 2 submission cannot be considered completed, and the
certification process of your Phase 2 package cannot start, until you have
notified the ESO User Support Department by clicking on the
p2pp-submit button in the P2PP main GUI.
After clicking the p2pp-submit button, a report listing all the
material existing for the run in the ESO Database will be automatically
generated and sent by e-mail to the Principal Investigator.
You must end any submission of material to the ESO Database by
clicking the p2pp-submit button. In particular, you must do it in any
of the following situations:
- initial Phase 2 package submission before the Period begins;
- submission of revised material after ESO review or at ESO request;
- submission of spectroscopic OBs created from pre-images.
After ESO receives your Phase 2 material, the User Support Department
will review it for completeness and accuracy. This review may take up
to a month. You will be contacted if problems are discovered.
However, some problems are only discovered when ESO attempts to
execute any given OB. If such a problem arises, ESO will contact you
as soon as possible and try to work with you to find a solution.
More detailed indications on the OB
re-submission procedures are available.
The contents of the Phase 2 package must closely follow the project as
described in the Phase 1 observing proposal. Any
significant deviations from the approved programme (e.g. new targets,
new instrument, new/different observing modes, etc.) must be approved by
ESO before the Phase 2 submission process is completed. All
approved run change requests should be summarized in your
README file. Please note that, starting with this Phase 2,
change requests must imperatively be submitted, together
with a scientific justification, through the
dedicated web form.
At Phase 1, specific observing conditions (lunar phase, seeing, and
transparency) were requested for each observing run. Your run was
reviewed and allocated time with these specific conditions in mind.
At Phase 2, you can relax your constraints to improve the
chances of execution of your programme, but you cannot specify more stringent
constraints. For example,
- if you requested Seeing = 1.0 at Phase 1, you can
specify Seeing = 1.2 at Phase 2, but not
Seeing = 0.8;
- if you requested Transparency = CLR at Phase 1, you can
specify THN or THK at Phase 2, but not PHO.
The only exception to this is the case in which only a small subset of OBs
need to be obtained under photometric conditions in order to provide an
accurate flux calibration, such as for instance a deep field in which a
network of bright flux reference objects can be set up from a shallow
exposure. Such exceptions are accepted only if accurate flux calibration
is needed for the scientific goals of the programme, and for an execution
time not exceeding 20% of the total allocated time.
- If you specified Seeing = 'n' at Phase 1, you must specify
Seeing = 2.0 or greater at Phase 2 (1.4 for NACO).
- If you specified Lunar Phase = 'd' at Phase 1, you must specify
FLI = 0.0 or greater at Phase 2.
- If you specified Lunar Phase = 'g' at Phase 1, you must specify
FLI = 0.4 or greater and
Moon Angular Distance = 120 or less at Phase 2.
- If you specified Lunar Phase = 'n' at Phase 1, you must specify
FLI = 1.0 and Moon Angular Distance = 60 or less at
Phase 2.
Note that FLI = 0.0 is interpreted as "moon below the horizon".
The time allocated to your program is total execution time, i.e.,
integration time + overheads. Therefore, the total execution time of the
OBs you submit should be less than or equal to the total time allocated
, with the only possible exception of
Target of Opportunity runs. The option of submitting OBs
for an execution time exceeding the allocation and terminating the programme
when the allocation time is exceeded is not currently supported in Service
Mode.
To determine total execution time, please use the
P2PP Execution Time report function (Reports -> Execution Time
from the P2PP tool main menu bar).
Although ESO carefully reviews OBs before they are scheduled at the
telescope, it is often impossible to detect an OB problem until it is
actually executed.
If an OB fails to execute due to an error introduced by the user
(as for example if the user entered wrong target coordinates), ESO reserves
the right to charge the respective observing programme for the time lost
during night operations. Time charged will include any telescope time
used to investigate why OB execution failed.
Time lost due to failures caused by ESO (e.g. instrument
malfunction) will not be charged to the user. Whenever
possible, these OBs will be re-executed as time, conditions, and
overall priority permit.
Target-of-Opportunity (ToO) and Rapid Response Mode (RRM) programmes
must follow special procedures to define and activate their observations,
described in detail in the
Target of Opportunity procedures and
Rapid Response Mode procedures pages.
Please note however that a valid Phase 2 package must still be submitted by
the general Phase 2 submission deadline
Note for RRM users: Please remember that RRM OBs, which use
a special template, can be triggered only through the RRM procedure. Any
OBs intended to follow a RRM trigger, including those intended to be
executed immediately after the RRM OB, must be submitted as normal ToO
OBs.
Observing runs with moving (solar system) targets must follow
special procedures, described in detail in the
Moving Target procedures page.
These procedures concern:
- Special OB requirements (naming convention, target coordinates)
- Requirements of the Ephemeris file attached to the OBs.
The use of special or user supplied filters during Service Mode
operations is generally not allowed. If your programme requires special
non-ESO filters that you wish to supply, please contact the
User Support Department as soon as you
receive the time allocation notification to discuss your requirements.
You should be aware of the following technical restrictions:
- ISAAC, NACO, VISIR: The use of non-ESO filters in these cryogenic
instruments is not currently possible. To discuss the possibility
of revising the ESO supplied filter sets in these instruments, please
contact Alan Moorwood.
- FORS1, FORS2, VIMOS: The use of special filters during Service Mode
operations is not allowed. See the
FORS and
VIMOS Web pages for further information.
When you are ready to ship your filter to Chile, please contact
the Visiting Astronomers Department
for assistance. Please allow up to one month for your shipment to
arrive at the telescope.
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