This is a help page specific to using Resource Cost Calculator online.
Inputs
The user may enter the input coordinates or resolve a
Target Name
using the
Resolve Name button.
Coordinate System
Select the coordinate system for specifying the
column direction. The Resource Cost Calculator
supports the following choices:
- Equatorial (J2000) - Equatorial w/ Julian epoch J2000
- Ecliptic (B1950) - Ecliptic w/ Besselian epoch B1950
Coordinates
Input a set of coordinates in the format of the
selected coordinate system or resolve a target name which will
set the RA/Dec coordinates in J2000.
The supported coordinate ranges are listed below.
- EQUATORIAL - RA
- Right Ascension, given in either sexagesimal or
decimal format. Sexagesimal values are specified as "hh mm [ss[.ss]]"
(that is, hours and minutes are required, seconds and fractions of
seconds are optional).
The range for RA is:
Sexagesimal 00 00 00.00 to 24 00 00.00
Decimal 00.00 to 360.00
- EQUATORIAL - Dec
- Declination, given in either sexagesimal or
decimal format. Sexagesimal values are specified as "sdd mm [ss[.ss]]".
The range for Dec is:
Sexagesimal -90 00 00.00 to 90 00 00.00
Decimal -90.00 to 90.00
- ECLIPTIC - EL
- Ecliptic Longitude, given in either sexagesimal or
decimal format. Sexagesimal values are specified as "hh mm
[ss[.ss]]".
The range for EL is:
Sexagesimal 00 00 00.00 to 24 00 00.00
Decimal 00.00 to 360.00
- ECLIPTIC - EB
- Ecliptic Latitude, given in either sexagesimal or
decimal format. Sexagesimal values are specified as "sdd mm
[ss[.ss]]".
The range for EB is:
Sexagesimal -90 00 00.00 to 90 00 00.00
Decimal -90.00 to 90.00
Enter a valid target name and click the
Resolve Name
button. This will query the catalog[s] specified in the
Name Resolver field.
If one, and only one entry is found, the coordinates will be
displayed in J2000. If no entry is found or more than one
entry is retrieved, the user will be asked to modify
the
Target Name and try again.
Name of the service or services that will be used to resolve
the target name when the
Resolve Name button is
pressed. The services will be chosen in the specified
order. For example, "NED/SIMBAD" will first search for the
target name in NED and then, if the name was not found, in
SIMBAD.
Proposed Exposure Time
The total exposure time in kiloseconds for requested
observation of this target.
Science Instrument
Specifies which detector will be on the optical axis during the
observation. The choices are: ACIS-I, ACIS-S, HRC-I, or HRC-S.
Required Chip Count
Required Chip Count for ACIS Instruments. Valid input range is
1 to 4.
If an HRC Instrument is selected, the Chip Count is defaulted
to zero.
Constraints
The addition of a constraint (or multiple constraints) will increase
the final resource cost. When stepping through each day of the cycle
and determining the visibility of a target, the constraint is taken
into account. If the constraint makes the target not visible on a day
(e.g., a window, roll, uninterrupt, or phase constraint) that target
will get a score of 0 on that day. Otherwise, the visibility score for
the target is divided by a number based on the difficulty of the
constraint. The more difficult the constraint, the larger the dividing
number and the lower the score for a given day.
Uninterrupt Constraint
Value indicating that the science can only be optimized if the
observation is interrupted as little as possible.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
'Y' indicates that the science goals can only be achieved if
the observation is not interrupted.
Observations >180 ksec will have to be interrupted due to the
satellite orbit. If the uninterrupted flag is checked, the
observations are constrained such that the pieces will be
observed as contiguously as possible, and certainly in
adjacent spacecraft orbits.
'Uninterrupted' and 'Split Interval' observations are mutually
exclusive.
Split Constraint
Value indicating whether, if the observation is split into
shorter segments during scheduling, all parts must be
completed within a defined interval.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Split Interval
Relative Time Interval between segments of the observation
if it is split during scheduling; all segments of the
observation are to occur within this interval, from the
beginning of the first to the end of the last. Valid range
is: Split Interval >= Proposed Exposure Time and < 731 days.
'Uninterrupted' and 'Split Interval' observations are mutually
exclusive.
'Grouping' and 'Split Interval' observations are mutually
exclusive.
Coordinated Observation
Must this observation be coordinated with that of another
observatory? Value indicating that the Chandra observations
are to be coordinated with another observatory.
- Coordination Window
Time Interval for coordinated observations. Valid range is
0.0 - 364.0 days.
Phase Constraint
Phase Dependent Observation. Value indicating that the
observation is to be performed only within a specified phase
range for a periodically-varying target.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Epoch (MJD)
For Phase Dependent observations, the reference date (MJD)
corresponding to a phase of 0.0. Observations will be made at an
integral number of Periods from this date, plus offsets as needed to
locate the observations within the specified phase range. The
reference date must be within 5 years of the current date.
- Period (days)
The period in days characterizing the target variability.
- Minimum Phase
Minimum phase in the variable phenomenon to be
observed. Values must be between 0 and 1.
- Minimum Phase Error
Tolerance in the minimum phase. This parameter sets how
precisely the phase range will be covered. Values must be
between 0 and 0.5.
- Maximum Phase
Maximum phase in the variable phenomenon to be
observed. Values must be between 0 and 1.
- Maximum Phase Error
Tolerance in the maximum phase. This parameter sets how
precisely the phase range will be covered. Values must be
between 0 and 0.5.
- Unique Phase
If a phase constrained observation is split and the
observations end up in different phase windows, do the
split observations need to sample unique parts of the
phase window, or can they overlap?
Options are: Y (Yes, sample unique parts of phase
window), N (No, they can overlap).
Pointing Constraint
Value indicating that the final pointing information/offsets
need to be modified based upon the roll angle.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
Group Constraint
Logical value indicating whether the observation needs to be
observed within a relative time range with other targets in
this proposal.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Maximum Time Interval
Relative Time Interval for grouping observations; all
observations are to occur within this interval, from the
beginning of the first to the end of the last. Valid range
is 0.0 - 364.0 days.
'Monitoring' and 'Grouping' observations are mutually
exclusive.
'Grouping' and 'Split Interval' observations are mutually
exclusive.
Monitor Constraint
Logical value indicating whether the observation needs to be
observed more than 1 time.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Exposure Time
Exposure time in kiloseconds allocated for each
observation. The total of the exposure times must equal
the time specified in the Total Observing Time field.
- Minimum Time Interval
Minimum interval from the end of the preceding
observation to the beginning of the current observation
in days. Valid range is 0.0 - 364.0 days.
- Maximum Time Interval
Maximum interval from the end of the preceding
observation to the beginning of the current observation
in days. Valid range is 0.0 - 364.0 days.
- Split Interval
Relative Time Interval between observations if they need
to be split; all observations are to occur within this
interval, from the beginning of the first to the end of
the last.
For Monitor series observations, valid range is: Split
Interval < Maximum Time Interval - Minimum Time Interval
'Monitoring' and 'Grouping' observations are mutually
exclusive.
Window Constraint
Logical value indicating a window constraint exists for this observation.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Start Time
The time in UT specifying the earliest observation start
time.
- Stop Time
The time in UT specifying the latest observation end
time.
Field Input:
- Browsers that support the Calendar Widget (e.g. Safari
v14.1+, Firefox v93+, Chrome v20+ )
- The widget will pop-up to aid in selecting the
date-time in the format:
mm/dd/yyyy hh:mm:ss.sss [AM|PM]
Note: Depending on the specific browser being used, some time fields may
need to be manually set.
- Browsers that do not support the widget (e.g. Firefox
versions below v93)
- Users should manually enter the date-time in the
following format:
YYYY:DOY:HH:MM:SS.sss (DOY = Day Of Year)
Note:
The Dates
application in this toolkit can help with obtaining Year and
DOY from a calendar date.
Roll Constraint
Value indicating a roll constraint exists for this observation.
A roll constraint translates directly into a constraint on the
day and time when an observation may be carried out. It should
only be specified for cases in which a specific attitude is
required to meet scientific objectives.
Options are: Y (Yes, required), N (No). The default is 'N'.
- Roll Angle and Roll Tolerance
The spacecraft roll angle and roll tolerance (defined as the
half-range and assumed symmetric) for the observation. Valid
range is 0.0 - 360.
- Is 180 Rotation OK?
Logical value indicating whether a 180 degree rotation of
the roll angle is acceptable. The default is 'N'.
Results
The normalized resource cost to Chandra for any target.
The resource cost is an estimate of how difficult a given
observation would be, based on (at the very least)
the location of the target in the sky (its visibility) and the length
of the exposure. Constraints are also taken into account and
increase the resource cost of a target. The more difficult the
constraint, the larger the final resource score will be.
In cases where the proposed observation cannot be performed as
specified (e.g., long, uninterrupted ACIS exposures) the
resource cost calculator may return the value "Inf", indicating
an infinite resource cost. In this case the user must consider
whether they can reduce the constraints on the observation
(e.g., by removing the uninterrupt constraint) while still
meeting their science goals.
The total RC budget for a given cycle is available in the Call
for Proposals. For further details regarding the Resource Cost numerical
value, please refer to the CfP at:
https://cxc.harvard.edu/proposer/CfP