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FUSE
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Mission Status Report
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Mission Status Report #78 Star Date: November 12, 2004
All is Well!
Caption: This spiffy new graphic shows an artist's concept of the FUSE
satellite's on-orbit confirguration, superimposed on an ultraviolet light image
of the Andromeda galaxy from the Galex satellite. (FUSE/JHU graphic courtesy of
Lauren Fowler, JHU.)
(Click image above to see larger version.)
Operations on the FUSE satellite continue to go well since my
last report. Operations continue at this point using a single gyro
in the control loop. With over a month and a half of one-gyro operations under our belts, all is
operating smoothly and as expected. (One-gyro operations are currently being used due to a noisy
gyro that developed during the June-Sept. 2004 period. See this
previous report.)
We have now had time to assess FUSE performance through the first half of Cycle 5 (Apr. 1 - Sept. 30, 2004)
and compare against earlier performance. Overall performance has continued to be excellent, with a
science efficiency of over 32%. This is lower than the 37% achieved during Cycle 4, but is essentially
the mission average value. More importantly, the lower overall percentage is due to our more
aggressive attempts to work specifically on reducing the backlog of targets from earlier cycles
that are still awaiting observation. These are not always the most efficient observations, but we
feel it is a good trade to give up some overall efficiency to give these specific accepted observations
their day in the sun, so to speak. The strategy is working well, as the backlog has been whittled
down significantly over the last six months. By the end of Cycle 5 in March 2005, we should have a much
smaller carryover from earlier cycles than we have had previously.
The FUSE Observers Advisory Committee (FOAC) met in Paris, France, during the first week of November.
The Paris meeting was an acknowledgement by the project of the significant support we have received over
the years from our French partners at the Institut d'Astrophysique Paris and the
Centre National d-Etudes Spatiales (CNES) (the French
space agency). The FOAC heard about project status, deliberated over options for use of our limited
resources, and generally provided important feedback to project scientist George Sonneborn and
the operations team about Cycle 6 plans and downstream operations. It was an excellent meeting, and
we thank our local hosts for their hospitality.
It is encouraging to see that FUSE results are popping up in the scientific literature ever more frequently
with each passing year. As of the end of October 2004, there have been nearly as many refereed FUSE
publications (63) as there were in ALL of calendar year 2003 (66). With many more publications still in
preparation it is looking like a banner year for FUSE results!
The deadline for Cycle 6 FUSE proposals was Sept. 17, 2004. NASA received a record
number of new proposals for potential observation in Cycle 6, for a record amount of
requested time. Competition will be stiff, but we take this as a good sign that
the astronomical community still holds a keen interest in new FUSE observations!
Proposal selections will be made later this fall with results announced near the
end of the year. Good luck to those who proposed!
Reported by: Bill Blair, FUSE Chief of Observatory Operations
Peruse Previous Status Reports, or
Return to the FUSE home page.
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