TY - GEN
T1 - Detail plans and preparations for the science operations of the XRISM mission
AU - Terada, Yukikatsu
AU - Holland, Matt
AU - Loewenstein, Michael
AU - Tashiro, Makoto
AU - Takahashi, Hiromitsu
AU - Nobukawa, Masayoshi
AU - Mizuno, Tsunefumi
AU - Tamura, Takayuki
AU - Uno, Shin'ichiro
AU - Watanabe, Shin
AU - Baluta, Chris
AU - Burns, Laura
AU - Ebisawa, Ken
AU - Eguchi, Satoshi
AU - Fukazawa, Yasushi
AU - Hayashi, Katsuhiro
AU - Iizuka, Ryo
AU - Katsuda, Satoru
AU - Kitaguchi, Takao
AU - Kubota, Aya
AU - Miller, Eric
AU - Mukai, Koji
AU - Nakashima, Shinya
AU - Nakazawa, Kazuhiro
AU - Odaka, Hirokazu
AU - Ohno, Masanori
AU - Ota, Naomi
AU - Sato, Rie
AU - Sugawara, Yasuharu
AU - Shidatsu, Megumi
AU - Tamba, Tsubasa
AU - Tanimoto, Atsushi
AU - Terashima, Yuichi
AU - Tsuboi, Yohko
AU - Uchida, Yuusuke
AU - Uchiyama, Hideki
AU - Yamauchi, Shigeo
AU - Yaqoob, Tahir
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 SPIE
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The XRISM is the X-ray astronomical mission led by JAXA/NASA/ESA with international participation, plan to be launched in 2022 (Japanese fiscal year), to quickly recover the high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy of astrophysical objects using the micro-calorimeter array after the failure of Hitomi. To enhance the scientific outputs of the mission, the Science Operations Team (SOT) is structured independently from the instrument teams and the mission operation team (MOT). The responsibilities of the SOT are summarized into four categories: 1) Guest observer program and data distributions, 2) Distribution of the analyses software and calibration database, 3) Guest observer supporting activities, and 4) the performance verification and optimization (PVO) activities. Before constructing the Operations Concept of the XRISM mission, the lessons on the Science Operations learned from the past Japanese X-ray missions (ASCA, Suzaku, and Hitomi) are reviewed, and 16 kinds of lessons are identified by the above categories: lessons on the importance of avoiding nonpublic (“animal”) tools, coding quality of public tools both on the engineering viewpoint and the calibration accuracy, tight communications with instrument teams and operations team, well-defined task division between scientists and engineers etc. Among these lessons, a) importance of the early preparations of the operations from the ground stage, b) construction of the independent team for the Science Operations from the instrument developments, and c) operations with well-defined duties by appointed members are recognized as the key lessons for XRISM. Then, i) the task division between the Mission and Science Operations and ii) the subgroup structure within the XRISM team are defined in detail as the XRISM Operations Concept. Then, following the Operations Concept, the detail plan of the Science Operations is designed as follows. The Science Operations tasks are shared among Japan, US, and Europe operated by three centers, the Science Operations Center (SOC) at JAXA, the Science Data Center (SDC) at NASA, and European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) at ESA. The SOT is defined as a combination of the SOC and SDC; the SOC is designed to perform tasks close to the spacecraft operations, such as spacecraft planning of science targets, quick-look health checks, pre-pipeline data processing, etc., and the SDC covers the tasks on the data calibration processing (pipeline processing), maintenance of the analysis tools etc. The data-archive and users-support activities are planned to be covered both by the SOC and SDC. Finally, the details of the Science Operations tasks and the tools for the Science Operations are also described in this paper. This information would be helpful for a construction of Science Operations of future X-ray missions.
AB - The XRISM is the X-ray astronomical mission led by JAXA/NASA/ESA with international participation, plan to be launched in 2022 (Japanese fiscal year), to quickly recover the high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy of astrophysical objects using the micro-calorimeter array after the failure of Hitomi. To enhance the scientific outputs of the mission, the Science Operations Team (SOT) is structured independently from the instrument teams and the mission operation team (MOT). The responsibilities of the SOT are summarized into four categories: 1) Guest observer program and data distributions, 2) Distribution of the analyses software and calibration database, 3) Guest observer supporting activities, and 4) the performance verification and optimization (PVO) activities. Before constructing the Operations Concept of the XRISM mission, the lessons on the Science Operations learned from the past Japanese X-ray missions (ASCA, Suzaku, and Hitomi) are reviewed, and 16 kinds of lessons are identified by the above categories: lessons on the importance of avoiding nonpublic (“animal”) tools, coding quality of public tools both on the engineering viewpoint and the calibration accuracy, tight communications with instrument teams and operations team, well-defined task division between scientists and engineers etc. Among these lessons, a) importance of the early preparations of the operations from the ground stage, b) construction of the independent team for the Science Operations from the instrument developments, and c) operations with well-defined duties by appointed members are recognized as the key lessons for XRISM. Then, i) the task division between the Mission and Science Operations and ii) the subgroup structure within the XRISM team are defined in detail as the XRISM Operations Concept. Then, following the Operations Concept, the detail plan of the Science Operations is designed as follows. The Science Operations tasks are shared among Japan, US, and Europe operated by three centers, the Science Operations Center (SOC) at JAXA, the Science Data Center (SDC) at NASA, and European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) at ESA. The SOT is defined as a combination of the SOC and SDC; the SOC is designed to perform tasks close to the spacecraft operations, such as spacecraft planning of science targets, quick-look health checks, pre-pipeline data processing, etc., and the SDC covers the tasks on the data calibration processing (pipeline processing), maintenance of the analysis tools etc. The data-archive and users-support activities are planned to be covered both by the SOC and SDC. Finally, the details of the Science Operations tasks and the tools for the Science Operations are also described in this paper. This information would be helpful for a construction of Science Operations of future X-ray missions.
KW - Operations Concept
KW - Operations Plan
KW - Science Operations
KW - The XRISM mission
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U2 - 10.1117/12.2560861
DO - 10.1117/12.2560861
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85099288779
T3 - Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
BT - Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2020
A2 - den Herder, Jan-Willem A.
A2 - Nikzad, Shouleh
A2 - Nakazawa, Kazuhiro
PB - SPIE
T2 - Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2020: Ultraviolet to Gamma Ray
Y2 - 14 December 2020 through 18 December 2020
ER -