GeminiFocus July 2013 | Page 24

Figure 2: Gemini South time allocations by instrument in Semester 2013B. A Busy Semester at Gemini South Looking forward, Gemini South operations (assuming all goes well) should see one of the most event-filled semesters in recent memory. On the horizon is a maintenance shutdown at the start of the semester, the delivery of the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) and its early commissioning, the delivery of the GMOS-S Hamamatsu CCDs, GeMS’s continued transition into science operations, and the first full semester of FLAMINGOS-2 operations. While not all of these items are yet firm, as work continues in the lab on both GPI and the CCD package, the schedule is being set up to accommodate all of these activities. Telescope and Dome Engineering Figure 3: Part of the Gemini South top-end system, in the lab during installation of the new micro-E sensors. The +Y sensor is installed behind the yellow plate on a black metal piece, just inside the upper ring next to the “+Y” label. 24 be removed (Figure 3) and thus requiring a shutdown of at least a week. What ensued is what you might expect. We took a detailed look at the likelihood of complete failure, which would leave us unable to guide, and of how detectable this would be in advance. We also weighed this against the disruption which would be caused by an unplanned shutdown, possibly in the middle of a GeMS or FLAMINGOS-2 commissioning or System Verification run. We worked it out such that the output could be monitored well enough to continue into semester 13A, but a number of possible shutdown points were identified in case deterioration accelerated or other opportunities emerged. In the end, a FLAMINGOS-2 delay produced an open schedule week in March, and it was decided that we had to go for it. Work started in late March, but almost immediately we were hit with a failure of the main transformer which supplies electricity to the whole of Cerro Pachón. The rest of the period is not one which anyone would wish to ever repeat, but the engineering team did a fantastic job and both completed the micro-E replacement and kept nighttime operations going on generators – albeit with a couple of hiccups early on when the main Gemini diesel generator suffered a mechanical failure and required supplementing with a hired unit. Replacing Top-end Position Sensors at Gemini South Late last year it was determined that the light output from two of our top-end mirror position sensors (known as “micro-E”s) was failing, indicating that the sensors were nearing the end of their lifetime almost a year earlier than expected. The process of replacing these sensors is highly invasive, requiring the entire top-end unit to GeminiFocus July2013