IRIS prepares one day plans on Monday to Thursday, and a 3 day plan on Friday. On each day the plan needs to be ready by 12:00 (local Pacific time), i.e., 20:00 UT in winter and 19:00 UT in summer. The plan will start at approximately 4 UT.
Specific timing details for the three Hinode Operation Periods (OPs) are discussed below. Key observing periods are highlighted, and represent those periods when both IRIS and Hinode can have reasonably "fresh" pointings. At other times IRIS would have to use "stale" Hinode pointings that may not be ideal.
Key observing period: 11 UT Saturday to 4 UT Tuesday (65 hours).
The IRIS plan will start at 4 UT (Saturday) and the EIS plan will start around 11 UT (Saturday). The draft EIS plan will be made between 01:30 UT (Friday) and 01:30 UT (Saturday). The IRIS plan will be completed by 20:00 UT on Friday. The EIS plan will be finalized after 01:30 UT (Saturday).
Suggestion: IRIS sends provisional plan details to Hinode on Thursday. This feeds into the Hinode draft plan. IRIS then sends final plan details which then lead to pointing and timing changes to the Hinode final plan. IRIS should not make large changes between the provisional plan and final plan.
Key observing period: 11 UT Tuesday to 4 UT Wednesday (17 hours).
The IRIS plan will start at 4 UT (Tuesday) and the EIS plan will start around 11 UT (Tuesday). The draft EIS plan will be made between 01:30 UT (Monday) and 01:30 UT (Tuesday). The IRIS plan will be completed by 20:00 UT on Monday. The EIS plan will be finalized after 01:30 UT (Tuesday).
Suggestion: IRIS sends provisional plan details for Tuesday and Wednesday to Hinode on Sunday. This feeds into the Hinode draft plan. IRIS then sends final plan details for Tuesday at 20 UT (Monday) which then lead to pointing and timing changes to the Hinode final plan. IRIS should not make large changes between the provisional plan and final plan.
Key observing period: 11 UT Thursday to 4 UT Friday (17 hours).
The IRIS plan will start at 4 UT (Thursday) and the EIS plan will start around 11 UT (Thursday). The draft EIS plan will be made between 01:30 UT (Wednesday) and 01:30 UT (Thursday). The IRIS plan will be completed by 20:00 UT on Wednesday. The EIS plan will be finalized after 01:30 UT (Tuesday).
Suggestion: IRIS sends provisional plan details for Thursday and Friday to Hinode on Wednesday. This feeds into the Hinode draft plan. IRIS then sends final plan details for Thursday at 20 UT (Wednesday) which then lead to pointing and timing changes to the Hinode final plan. IRIS should not make large changes between the provisional plan and final plan.
Many IRIS rasters will generally be very small (20" x 60" and smaller) and very quick (less than a minute). There is a fundamental uncertainty in the EIS absolute pointing of about 10" in X. This means that EIS rasters should generally have a minimum width of 30" (allowing some contingency). If EIS is in sit-and-stare mode, then IRIS should have a width of at least 30".
IRIS has one slit with width 0.33". Large rasters (>10") will generally have large step sizes (1" or larger).
IRIS slitjaw images will be in C II, Si IV and Mg II. There may be possibilities to align these with He II 256 slot images. Generally IRIS will align with AIA 1600 using the slitjaw images.
A copy of the IRIS 30 day plan can be obtained by clicking on the 'Attach' tab at the top of this page. This document is accurate as of 17 Jan 2013.
The 30 day plan generally consists of blocks of several hours with the same pointing. Most of these blocks will be repeated several times during the 30 day period. Within the block IRIS will do several different observation types that typically last about 1 hour (e.g., sit-and-stare followed by rasters). For the convenience of EIS planning, EIS should probably just repeat a single raster for the whole block with slot context rasters appended at the start and end.
I have labeled the blocks with codes such as "AR1" and "QS1" but these are not used by the IRIS team.
The EIS priority indicates the likely importance of having coordinated EIS data for the IRIS study. Since EIS will not be able to support IRIS 24 hours/day, then the EIS CO should give preference to studies with priority 1.
Science goal: evolution of abundances, outflows, and coronal heating.
EIS priority: 1
IRIS: large raster plus a number of plage studies (each with the same pointing?).
EIS: HPW021_VEL_240x512v1, repeats of IUU_SCAN_STEPS_002 also abundance study -DB if we're running 7 hours per day
Science goal: sunspot oscillations.
EIS priority: 2
IRIS: sit-and-stare; deep raster.
EIS: assuming that waves are of interest - DRW_Alf_01
EIS priority: 2
Science goal: flows
IRIS: large raster plus plage study.
EIS: DHB_006
Science goal: waves in fan loops (both intensity and Doppler velocity)
EIS priority: 1
IRIS: deep raster; sit-and-stare
EIS: IUU_SCAN_STEPS_002 for intensity oscillations (maybe AIA would do this instead?) or BL_SUMER_EIS
Science goal:on disk, energy transfer (and dynamics) in QS features such as jets and bright points.
EIS priority: 1
IRIS: large rasters, sit-and-stare, small rasters
EIS: SK_CH1_55X512 a large continuous raster and then HPW002?
Science goal: spicules - looking for coronal counterpart of spicules.
EIS priority: 2
IRIS: deep raster, small rasters, sit-and-stare
EIS:narrow raster - DRW001_HIGH_BRT_V2 (with density sensitive lines)
Science goal: assuming limb: jet and spicules/plumes
EIS priority: 1
EIS: DRW001_HIGH_BRT_V2 (may need something with bigger step sizes?)
IRIS - possible pointing E-W at limb.
Science goal: energy transfer in coronal hole - tracking outflow through the atmosphere.
IRIS: deep full wavelength raster.
EIS: quiet raster atlas - DHB_atlas_120M_30"
Science goal:look at absorption across the temperature range, looking at temperature distribution and strong dynamics.
EIS priority: 2
EIS: take a full spectrum once. HPW23, then do a sit n stare at limb - PROM_RAST_SMALL_V2
IRIS:
Science goal: waves and dynamics in filaments
EIS: sit and stare - BL_SUMER_EIS
IRIS: