Important Updates
Documents and Tools for Proposers
- Please see the Proposers page for detailed information on how to submit a proposal.
- The Proposers Observatory Guide (POG) is the primary ACIS reference manual. Basic observing principles can be reviewed in Section 6.2 of the POG.
- ProVis is the Chandra target visibility tool. It gives target visibility, roll and pitch angle as a function of time. Pitch angle can be important for a time constrained observation (see notes on time constrained observations and POG chapter on visibility and constraints)
- PIMMS is the Chandra count rate simulator
- ObsVis allows Chandra instrument fields-of-view to be overlaid on sky images.
ACIS Observing Strategies
Before submitting a proposal, ACIS proposers need to be aware of the following issues:
- Bright sources (additional information) might be affected by pileup. Pileup results when the count rate is so high that two or more photons are detected as a single event. PIMMS can be used to estimate pileup while pileup and pileup mitigation are discussed in Section 6.15 of the POG. The point source thread discusses pileup. A detailed description of pileup, how to mitigate it and how to deal with it is given in the Chandra ABC guide to pileup.
- Observing Extended Sources (additional information) Background rates can be very important when estimating the exposure times for extended objects (see proposal thread on Groups and Clusters). The ACIS on-orbit background is composed of cosmic X-ray background, charged particles and the "trailing" of the target image during readout. Significant background flares can occur during an observation. Background issues are discussed in the POG.
- Choice of ACIS chips (additional information). ACIS can read out a maximum of 6 chips. Proposers must select which chips are required to be ON, and also designate chips that are OPTIONAL (can be turned off by the Mission Planning team when thermal issues dictate). Read more about ACIS parameters and priorities on the RPS page. Also the document Specifying Optional CCDs for Cycle 14 and the Future describes in detail the thermal limitations and gives recommendation about operating and optional CCDs.
- Choice of Back vs. Front Illuminated Chips (additional information). The four ACIS-I chips offer the largest field of view and lowest background. However, the FI chips suffered radiation damage which degraded their spectral response. Because of this, many observers choose the S3 chip for high resolution studies where a large field of view is not required.