4.10. Data Archiving System#
The GMT data archiving system (DAS) manages, stores, and distributes all data products related to the operations of the observatory. The SWCS requirements as derived from the System Level are shown in Table 10-41. All the data in the DAS are maintained on-site at the observatory for operations, and are backed up in at least one off-site location.
Title |
Statement |
---|---|
Science and Engineering data storage /archive and access |
The SWCS shall provide archival storage for science (raw and processed) and engineering data, and the capability to query and retrieve data. |
User Documentation |
The SWCS shall provide users with online guides and manuals for all equipment and facility instrumentation that is used during routine operations. |
On-Line Context Documentation |
The SWCS shall provide help, reference and user guide information for users to access in a contextual manner. |
On-Line documentation |
The SWCS shall provide all the reference information and operation manuals to be accessible interactively by users. |
Technical Documentation |
The SWCS shall provide technical documentation in the form of manuals, drawings, and online tools to support operation, maintenance, and repair of all instrument subsystems. |
The GMT DAS architecture is based on the client-server model where a server maintains the data, manages their access, and performs processing needed to complete requests, while clients make requests to the server to access the archive for searching, retrieving, updating, deleting, or ingesting data. The DAS is comprised of forward server, global server, trending server, and backup server. The different servers have the following roles:
Forward Server – The forward server manages the Phase I and Phase II telescope proposal preparations by astronomers and the TAC process, including exposure time calculations/simulations, proposal submission, observing design and specification, and proposal management.
Global Server – Residing at the core, the global server has general and unrestricted access to data stored in the GMT data archive. The role of the global server is to manage transactions between different severs and the users. Access to the servers from the outside world is via clients that will have varying degrees of access to the database, depending on permission levels.
Trending Server – The trending server organizes time-series data in the archive so that observatory applications can use the data to easily monitor, diagnose or improve performance behavior.
Backup Server – The backup server provides the capability to create copies of the archived data to guarantee their integrity.
The DAS will store all operations data, including but not limited to: science, engineering, facility and environmental repositories, which are discussed below. Each type of data has a storage duration defined by the SLR, and based on operation needs. Essential engineering and science data will exist for the lifetime of the observatory (50 years), while for non-essential data the duration may vary. However, it is a goal to provide permanent storage for all engineering data, if feasible and cost effective. The DAS collections include:
Science – Required by SCI-1130, the operational data archive stores any information produced in direct support of science observations that are applied to science data frames, affect their photometric calibrations, provide information about the observations, or facilitate the observing process. These include calibration images (biases, darks, flats), PSFs, off-sky, standard stars, etc. Science data archive also contains observing programs, such as proposals, observing setups, instrument configurations, observing sequences, observing logs (generated both by users and subsystems), exposure time simulations, etc. All science data are proprietary up to a specified period of time. The science data archive includes a custom area that will allow users to store observational configurations that may be recalled or reused in future observing runs. User archive collections can be defined as proprietary according to observatory data distribution policies. The categories of science data are:
Raw – Raw data directly from the telescope instruments prior to any manipulation or data rescaling. Raw data should have units that are the basic counting units of the detector, i.e., usually [electrons] or [electrons/ADU]. The images will have instrumental and observing artifacts (cosmic rays, hot pixels, dead pixels, dead columns, non-uniform illumination patterns) that have not been manipulated in any way.
Reduced – Data processed through basic data reduction steps, including bias, dark, etc., through the point of flatfielding, to account for primary instrumental signatures. Reduced images should have a uniform special illumination pattern, and corrections for pixel-to- pixel sensitivity differences. For spectroscopy, this entails linearizing the data in wavelength, spatially on detectors, and flux corrections.
Combined – Multiple sub-exposures of the same observational block, or unit, are combined in an optimal way for the purpose of increasing the signal-to-noise; removing cosmic-rays, saturation, bad pixels, etc. For IFU data, this involves transforming 2-D spectra into a 3-D data cube. This may include mosaic combinations, if doing so is necessary for removing instrumental signatures.
Calibrated – Places combined and/or reduced images onto a flux calibrated scale, using standard star observations.
High level – High-level data products include everything beyond calibration, and may be specified by the observer. Examples of high level data products are mosaic combinations, object or spectral feature extraction, data analysis, etc.
Observing Programs – Observing programs include Phase I science proposals, Phase II observation and instrument definitions, and instrument configuration setups.
Sequences – Observatory-wide sequences of the observations that a user may use and modify.
Pipeline Parameters – Observatory-wide parameters used for data or activity pipelines. Scripts: Observatory-wide scripts used for data reduction, analysis, or other purposes.
Logs – Observing and user logs. Observing logs have the same proprietary status as the parent data with which they are associated.
User Archive – User archive stores information about the users, such as their contact information, affiliation, proposals, etc. A user archive can also store observing notes, templates, scripts, pipeline parameters, data and models generated from exposure time calculations, and observing sequences that she/he may find useful to recall for future observations. The user archive is proprietary and can only be accessed by users and observatory personnel with correct permission settings. However, the archive can be shared between different users/visitors to allow collaboration when the owner grants appropriate permissions.
Documentation – Instruction manuals for carrying out science observations, including: data taking, archival access, remote observing, user interfaces, observing procedures, instrument
Engineering – Engineering data archive stores information relevant to operation and maintenance of hardware and software. Engineering data originate from the telescope, science instruments, and other mechanical and electrical systems in the observatory, operating, and supporting facilities. Examples of engineering data include: telemetry, health status, logs, technical manuals, schematics, and other data from the telescope subsystems, science instruments, devices, etc. The broad category of engineering data includes:
Runtime Data – During runtime operations, the telescope and instruments generate telemetry, detector, and sensor information that are continuously and automatically monitored. In particular, telemetry data refers to all information that has time stamps. Examples of telemetry data include telescope motor encoder positions; instrument shutter status; filter wheel position status; AGWS correction rates; interlock and safety states; atmospheric seeing, etc. The health and performance of most devices and subsystems are monitored without human knowledge or participation. The process involves performing automatic analysis, generating operating statistics, and finally filtering the information for human operators to interpret. All raw and processed runtime data are stored in the engineering data archive.
Configuration Data – Configuration data are critical to the correct operation of the observatory. Configuration data include site information (elevation, longitude, latitude, etc.), lookup tables for telescope pointing, flexure models, coordinate transform matrices, geometric correction and transformation parameters, etc. It also includes: operational presets that are loaded into all telescope systems for initialization upon start-up, resets, or to change configurations during runtime operations; default parameters used by instruments, calibration pipelines, and sequences.
Logs – Engineering logs are reports entered by observatory staff (technical report, nightly reports, maintenance logs, etc.) or generated automatically by the telescope or instruments in the course of operations (nightly observational summary report, health status of all subsystems, devices, and components, errors). Observing logs are reported by observers and telescope operators that summarize the data that were obtained each night.
Documentation – Engineering documentation archive stores manuals, technical schematics, engineering notes, for all observatory components such as electronics, mechanical parts, devices, sensors, detectors, motors, etc.
Software – Software (code, scripts) that are both contributed by users for high level analysis or operations, and native to observatory operations are stored in the engineering archive.
Hardware – Hardware data include the health and status of the telescope, AO, all the subsystems, computers, environmental sensors, exhaust fans, communication network, observatory alarm systems, building and environmental sensors, system logs, etc. For environmental sensors, their status and health are part of facility hardware data, whereas the sensor readouts, e.g., temperature, wind speed, earthquake magnitude, and other weather-related data, are classified as environmental data.
Facility and Environment Data Facility and environment data support the operation of the telescope by monitoring the environment in which the telescope operates. Environmental data help to inform safety and enable the facility to cope with changing conditions (winds, clouds), and make decisions on the observing modes (AO, natural seeing). The data measure the conditions both in and outside of the telescope and facility enclosure. The categories of Facility environment data include:
Weather – Cloud coverage, wind speed and direction, humidity, temperature, pressure, rain condition. Some of the information is obtained from the national weather service stations.
Atmospheric – Turbulence: The OCD calls for monitoring of the atmospheric turbulence and seeing which may be monitored by a scintillation sensor.
Seismic – Earthquake
Ambient – Enclosure temperature, wind speed and direction, precipitable water vapor, dust level, sky brightness