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2. Changes Since AO-7
This page summarizes the main changes to the Suzaku Technical
Description since the last AO and re-emphasizes several
important issues to consider for the preparation of proposals. Please
note that this should not prevent the user to carefully read
the new version of the Technical Description.
New:
- The total time nominally available for observations to the
community is again 11902ks in AO-8 (11902ks in AO-4 to AO-7,
12038ks in AO-3, 11722ks in AO-2). 2Ms will be used for
continuing Key projects, accepted in or before AO-7; any remaing
time will be added to the Joint Japan-US time. 5451ks are assigned
to Japanese observations, this includes 909ks for proposals
submitted to ESA as joint Japan-ESA observations, and 3963ks go to
US observations. The remaining 488ks are foreseen for joint
Japan-US investigations.
- Every possible measure to enable normal observations through the
end of the AO-8 period (2014 March 31) will be taken, but still the
operation of a subset of the instruments might have to be stopped if
the power shortage becomes serious enough. Further degradation of
the power supply may even lead to premature termination of AO-8. A
simple extrapolation of the power history implies that
a partial shutdown of the scientific instruments should be
considered around early 2014. However, this estimate depends on the
radiation environment on orbit, such as the activity level of the
Sun.
- Given this, all new Cycle 8 proposals should stand on their own
merits, in the sense of not requiring future (Cycle 9)
Suzaku observations.
- Previously, targets with Sun angles in the range 65 to 110
degrees were accessible for Suzaku
observations. Considering the power situation, the Sun angle
range will be restricted to 70-110 degrees for AO-8
observations.
- It is conceivable that the amount of time available for
target-of-opportunity and time critical observations will have to be
reduced.
- The Key Project proposal category was introduced in AO-4 for
comprehensive observing programs sampling a number of objects of a
particular class or surveying a large region of the sky, in order to
take maximal advantage of the unique attributes of Suzaku to address
important astrophysical problems. While no new Key Project
proposals will be solicited in AO-8 given the power supply
degradation, the project team decided to concentrate on
completing Key Projects that have been accepted in previous
cycles.
Reminders:
- The category of ``Long Program'' for proposals with a total
exposure time
300ks, available in (only) the US from AO-3 to
AO-6 has not been offered since AO-7 anymore.
- As before all projects with total exposure times equal to or
more than 300ks are open to the public immediately.
- Regular US proposals may request no more than 1Ms of observing
time for practical reason (ISAS/JAXA proposals may not exceed total
exposure times of 400ks). Note that for TOO proposals this 1Ms
limit applies to the actually requested observing time. It is
therefore possible to request 400ks per target for up to 2
triggers among 5 potential targets, for example.
- Since AO-5, individual raster scan observations have to have the
same minimum exposure time of 10ks per pointing as other
observations.
- XIS1 suffered a micro-meteorite hit in December 2009. Following
diagnostic measurements showed that the scientific impact is
minimal. See section 7.3.6 for more information about
previous micrometeorite hits and their effects.
- The use of the HXD nominal aim point is discouraged. To this end the
HXD team will no longer provide response matrices for simulation for
observations at the HXD nominal aim point. The XIS team will no
longer support observations at the HXD nominal aim point that use
the P-sum mode, the Window option or the Burst option.
- Two Suzaku memos provide information about the jitter of the
pointing direction that can affect observations since the end of
2009
( ftp://legacy.gsfc.nasa.gov/suzaku/doc/general/suzakumemo-2010-05.pdf
and
ftp://legacy.gsfc.nasa.gov/suzaku/doc/general/suzakumemo-2010-06.pdf).
Note that the first one describes an effect - the observed light
curves being modulated due to telescope vignetting - that is
mitigated by not using the HXD aim point.
- Proposals using the P-sum/Timing mode of the XIS are
encouraged. There is no longer a limit on the amount of
P-sum/Timing mode observations that can be accepted. Proposers
should be aware of the properties of the P-sum/Timing mode. Photon
pile-up scarcely occurs in this mode, and a time resolution as fast
as 7.8ms can be achieved, but only a 1-dimensional image can be
obtained. Note that the P-sum/Timing mode can be adopted
only for the XIS3, and neither the Spaced-row Charge Injection nor a
CTI correction can be applied. The energy resolution is therefore
significantly worse than in the normal imaging mode. The calibration
accuracy is not as good as that for the normal imaging mode,
either.
- XIS recipes for P-sum data reduction and pile-up detection have
been released which are useful for planning observations requiring
high time resolution and pile-up mitigation. Please see
http://www.astro.isas.jaxa.jp/suzaku/analysis/xis/.
- For feasibility studies of HXD data analyses proposers should
simulate observations with the responses and background files
provided for the XIS aim point, then analyze them by varying the
background by typically
% for the PIN and
% for the
GSO. This procedure mimics the level of systematic uncertainties in
the current HXD background models (see sections 5.5.2
and 8.5). The background files were generated
based on the Lockman hole observation performed on 2009-06-12. The
PIN threshold of Epoch 9 has been applied. Channels below 15keV
should be ignored due to uncertainties in the response and
background. As long as this is done, simulations based on these
files are suitable for simulating AO-8 observations.
- Note that the Suzaku project has an agreement with the
Fermi project as well as with the Chandra
project to make a modest amount of Suzaku time available for
allocation through their proposal review processes for
investigations that take advantage of joint observations. See
Chandra and Fermi calls for proposals for further
details.
- Real-time TOO proposals (outside the AO process, through
http://www.astro.isas.jaxa.jp/suzaku/planning/gtoo/)
for gamma-ray bursts can be submitted by all investigators,
including those who are not part of the Suzaku science working group.
Next: 3. Mission Description
Up: Suzaku Technical Description
Previous: 1. Introduction
Contents
Michael Arida
2012-10-19