A Description of the ASTER Scheduling Process
Each day the ASTER Ground Data System (GDS) in Japan analyzes the database of requests for ASTER data acquisitions and develops a schedule for 27 hours of observations. This process is described here.Requests for ASTER data acquisitions
Authorized individuals ("ASTER Users") and the ASTER Science Team as a whole can request that the ASTER instrument acquire new data. This is described in more detail under Obtaining ASTER Data? A request from an individual ASTER User is called a Data Acquisition Request (DAR). A request from the entire ASTER Science Team is called a Science Team Acquisition Request (STAR). The term "xAR" is used to refer to either a DAR or STAR.
DAR and STAR input parameters
Each xAR describes the area which should be imaged (the "Area of Interest" or AOI) and the epoch(s) during which such images should be acquired (the "Acquisition Window(s)"). A variety of other parameters are specified for the requested observations, including the maximum amount of cloud cover the requestor will accept in his/her images and the desired ASTER observing mode.
This website provides online help in choosing values for some of xAR input parameters under Helpful hints on xAR input parameters. More information on all input parameters is provided in the online DAR Tool Tutorial.
XAR database
The DAR Tool will enable ASTER Users authorized by NASA to submit their requests to the ASTER GDS. STARs will be submitted by the Science Team to gather larger amounts of data, usually of general interest to the science community. At the GDS, DARs and STARs are collected in the "xAR database," which is used as input whenever a One Day Schedule is generated.
The ASTER Scheduler
The ASTER GDS contains software (the ASTER Scheduler) which chooses between different observing alternatives for each small increment of time, in a manner designed to maximize the science return over a time period of a day. The Scheduler reads all active DARs and STARs in the ASTER GDS in order to do this. Its scheduling algorithm uses a prioritization function to rank the alternative observing modes (and non-observing instrument modes) for each time-step. The output schedule can be modified by changing the Schedulers input parameters; the ASTER Science Team is responsible for choosing these input parameters.
The latest global cloud-cover forecast from NOAA will be used as input by the Scheduler each day, when generating the One Day Schedule. These data are used in the prioritization function to increase the fraction of ASTER images which are sufficiently free of clouds to meet the requirements of ASTER users.