Paper
29 July 2010 ALMA science operations
Lars-Åke Nyman, Paola Andreani, John Hibbard, Sachiko K. Okumura
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array) project is an international collaboration between Europe, East Asia and North America in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. The ALMA Array Operations Site (AOS) is located at Chajnantor, a plateau at an altitude of 5000 m in the Atacama desert in Chile, and the ALMA Operations Support Facility (OSF) is located near the AOS at an altitude of 2900 m. ALMA will consist of an array of 66 antennas, with baselines up to 16 km and state-of-the-art receivers that cover all the atmospheric windows up to 1 THz. An important component of ALMA is the compact array of twelwe 7-m and four 12-m antennas (the Atacama Compact Array, ACA), which will greatly enhance ALMA's ability to image extended sources. Construction of ALMA started in 2003 and will be completed in 2013. Commissioning started in January 2010 and Early Science Operations is expected to start during the second half of 2011. ALMA science operations is provided by the Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) in Chile, and the three ALMA Regional Centers (ARCs) located in each ALMA region - Europe, North America and East Asia. ALMA observations will take place 24h per day, interrupted by maintenance periods, and will be done in service observing mode with flexible (dynamic) scheduling. The observations are executed in the form of scheduling blocks (SBs), each of which contains all information necessary to schedule and execute the observations. The default output to the astronomer will be pipeline-reduced images calibrated according to the calibration plan. The JAO is responsible for the data product quality. All science and calibration raw data are captured and archived in the ALMA archive, a distributed system with nodes at the OSF, the Santiago central office and the ARCs. Observation preparation will follow a Phase 1/Phase 2 process. During Phase 1, observation proposals will be created using software tools provided by the JAO and submitted for scientific and technical review. Approved Phase 1 proposals will be admitted to Phase 2 where all observations will be specified as SBs using software tools provided by the JAO. User support will be done at the ARCs through a helpdesk system as well as face-to-face support.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Lars-Åke Nyman, Paola Andreani, John Hibbard, and Sachiko K. Okumura "ALMA science operations", Proc. SPIE 7737, Observatory Operations: Strategies, Processes, and Systems III, 77370G (29 July 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.858023
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Data archive systems

Calibration

Antennas

Data processing

Observatories

Antimony

Data acquisition

RELATED CONTENT

The human pipeline: distributed data reduction for ALMA
Proceedings of SPIE (August 06 2014)
ALMA observations during its first early science cycles
Proceedings of SPIE (August 06 2014)
Validation of ESO Phase 3 data submissions
Proceedings of SPIE (July 15 2016)
ALMA science operations and user support: software
Proceedings of SPIE (July 29 2010)
NRAO VLA archive survey
Proceedings of SPIE (July 12 2008)

Back to Top