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Cycle 15 Tools
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Guide Star Availability in Two Gyro Mode
As a general rule, the availability of guide stars will be unaffected
by Two Gyro operations. We expect that guide stars as faint as 14.0
magnitude can be used in Two Gyro mode.
On occasion (<1% of the time) we use guide stars fainter than 14.0,
when no other stars are available. When using these faint guide stars,
there is a possibility that loss
of lock may occur, resulting in termination of science data collection
(either for the remainder of the orbit or possibly the remainder of
the visit). It is anticipated that loss of lock will occur
infrequently, and perhaps only if multiple (pointing) disturbances
occur during guiding. There are also rare occasions when we have used
single FGS guiding, rather than requiring a pair of guide stars. This
will not be possible in Two Gyro mode.
There are often situations, especially for targets at high galactic
latitude, when we must take advantage of orientation flexibility in
order to find a suitable pair of guide stars. Unconstrained
observations (no orientation or timing requirements) will have
sufficient flexibility that we expect no additional trouble finding
guide stars for them while in Two Gyro mode. We will have a little
more difficulty with highly constrained observations, since the
schedulers will have fewer work-arounds available to them in Two Gyro
mode. In Three Gyro mode we could sometimes use orientations that
differed by 90 or 180 degrees from what the observer specified, and then
find guide stars for these programs. In Two Gyro mode we likely will
have only one legal 90 degree alternate orientation, and generally
will not be able to use the 180 degree alternate. In some cases this
reduced availability of orientation ranges may preclude finding
suitable guide stars. It is particularly important for observers of
high latitude targets to be as generous as possible when adding
orientation or timing constraints, in order to maintain the
flexibility needed to find guide stars (as well as to schedule the
observations).
The Two Gyro Science Mode web site can be found at:
http://www.stsci.edu/hst/HST_overview/TwoGyroMode
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