EIS Planning & Operations.
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Study Submission Requirements#
To find out what you should submit with your observation request, check out Newstudies
How to get your observations run#
For examples of what EIS is running these days, and who to talk to about proposing observations if you have questions, go over to PlanningObservations
Searching for and Decoding the contents of an EIS Study#
To look up an EIS observation, or Study, and find out how it's defined (using SolarSoft) you can use EisXstudy
Hinode eclipse season#
To find out what the annual ''Eclipse Season'' means for EIS, you can take a look at the original information posted at EclipseEffects last year, or the more up-to-date information in the Eclipse Season section of the new S-Band Observing Info page.
Requesting XRT support#
To request XRT support for your EIS observations, particularly if you do not intend to go through the HOP system, see the Wiki page at XRTSupport.
Some suggested studies#
As a place to start if you have no idea what to use with EIS, Peter Young has started a discussion page at RecommendedStudies.
Searching for studies#
There is already a large number of studies out there, already available to use. To help you find out if an existing programme would meet your requirements, Harry Warren and Ignacio Ugarte have written eis_search_rasters to help you find the right raster. Take a look at SearchingForStudies to find out how this powerful SolarSoft search tool works.
EIS Data Compression Factors#
Jian Sun has done extensive work on the effective Data Compression (DC) factors associated with the various on-board compression algorithms on Hinode. See CompressionFactorStudy for more on this.EIS studies under the low data-volume restriction