Paper
26 July 2016 Towards a dynamical scheduler for ALMA: a science - software collaboration
Jorge Avarias, Ignacio Toledo, Daniel Espada, John Hibbard, Lars-Ake Nyman, Rafael Hiriart
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
State-of-the art astronomical facilities are costly to build and operate, hence it is essential that these facilities must be operated as much efficiently as possible, trying to maximize the scientific output and at the same time minimizing overhead times. Over the latest decades the scheduling problem has drawn attention of research because new facilities have been demonstrated that is unfeasible to try to schedule observations manually, due the complexity to satisfy the astronomical and instrumental constraints and the number of scientific proposals to be reviewed and evaluated in near real-time. In addition, the dynamic nature of some constraints make this problem even more difficult. The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is a major collaboration effort between European (ESO), North American (NRAO) and East Asian countries (NAOJ), under operations on the Chilean Chajnantor plateau, at 5.000 meters of altitude. During normal operations at least two independent arrays are available, aiming to achieve different types of science. Since ALMA does not observe in the visible spectrum, observations are not limited to night time only, thus a 24/7 operation with little downtime as possible is expected when full operations state will have been reached. However, during preliminary operations (early-science) ALMA has been operated on tied schedules using around half of the whole day-time to conduct scientific observations. The purpose of this paper is to explain how the observation scheduling and its optimization is done within ALMA, giving details about the problem complexity, its similarities and differences with traditional scheduling problems found in the literature. The paper delves into the current recommendation system implementation and the difficulties found during the road to its deployment in production.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jorge Avarias, Ignacio Toledo, Daniel Espada, John Hibbard, Lars-Ake Nyman, and Rafael Hiriart "Towards a dynamical scheduler for ALMA: a science - software collaboration", Proc. SPIE 9913, Software and Cyberinfrastructure for Astronomy IV, 99133W (26 July 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2232004
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KEYWORDS
Antennas

Bismuth

Telescopes

Algorithm development

Astronomy

Observatories

Space telescopes

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