PDS_VERSION_ID = PDS3 LABEL_REVISION_NOTE = " For New Horizons, this LABEL_REVISION_NOTE is used to keep track of when the template is used to generate a DATASET.CAT file for a data set. Brian Carcich - Publication date: 2016-10-31 - NH-internal archive software version: V2.0 " RECORD_TYPE = STREAM INSTRUMENT_HOST_NAME = "NEW HORIZONS" OBJECT = DATA_SET DATA_SET_ID = "NH-P-SDC-3-PLUTO-V2.0" OBJECT = DATA_SET_INFORMATION START_TIME = 2015-01-17T15:43:08.693 STOP_TIME = 2016-01-18T21:17:31.067 DATA_SET_DESC = " Data Set Overview ================= This data set contains Calibrated data taken by New Horizons Student Dust Counter instrument during the PLUTO mission phase. The mission of the SDC is to analyze the size and distribution of Interplanetary Dust Particles (IDPs) along the New Horizons trajectory to the Kuiper Belt. SDC comprises twelve thin, permanently polarized polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) plastic film sensors, with a combined area of about 0.1 m**2, mounted on the top surface of a support panel and normal to the spacecraft ram direction (flight velocity). In addition, there are two reference sensors, identical to the top surface sensors, mounted on the back side of the detector support panel and protected from any dust impacts, used to monitor background noise levels. An impacting IDP causes a depolarization charge when it penetrates the PVDF film on one of the sensors. That charge is then measured by that sensor's electronics (channel); if the measurement is above a preset level, the instrument records and stores the event for later downlink. The level preset is adjusted based on in-flight Noise Floor Calibrations, and there are extensive autonomy rules adjusting SDC behavior, even turning channels off for up to thirty days at a time, to avoid overloading the storage system with noise. SDC was designed to detect events for particles down to about one picogram at Pluto [BAGENALETAL2016]; that detection limit is lower than earlier in the mission where the spacecraft velocity was higher. The SDC instrument has a temperature- and velocity-dependent calibration, first converting the raw measurement to charge, then converting charge to particle mass. The common data product is a binary table of downlinked event data: time; sensor channel; magnitude; threshold magnitude. Associated data products are housekeeping data such as instrument temperatures for calibration and near-in-time spacecraft thruster events, which may induce false positives i.e. SDC events not caused by IDPs. The channels in the binary table for raw data are numbered from 0 to 13; the channel in the binary table for calibrated data are numbered from 1 to 14. Some time between instrument delivery to the spacecraft and launch, the detector on one channel began exhibiting symptoms of degraded electrical contacts to the PVDF; data from that channel (channel number 10 in raw data; channel number 11 in calibrated data) are still processed but should be ignored. During the Pluto Charon Encounter mission phase starting in January, 2015, there were several sub-phases: three Approach sub-phases, (AP1, AP2 and AP3); a CORE sequence for the Pluto flyby on 14.July, 2015 (Day Of Year 195), sometimes also referred to as NEP (Near-Encounter Phase); three Departure sub-phases (DP1, DP2, DP3). For this second SDC delivery for the Pluto mission phase, this data set includes all SDC data through late-January, 2016, including all encounter data. SDC was turned on throughout Approach. It was powered off then on periodically when needed for spacecraft power reasons or for trajectory correction maneuvers, and the channels were turned off and on around the start of DSN tracks that contained tweakups, as per normal operations. The thresholds were updated and set higher for Pluto - making SDC less sensitive to dust hits - on January 1st, 2015 (DOY 001), then set back to Cruise threshold settings on July 30th (DOY 211). The threshold used for each dust hit is recorded in extension 1 of the calibrated data products. During the five days before and after the Pluto flyby, SDC detected one probable dust hit event. The event happened on July 11, three days prior to Pluto closest approach, at a distance of ~3000 Pluto radii. Refer to figure 6 of Bagenal et al. (2016) [BAGENALETAL2016] for more details. Every observation provided in this data set was taken as a part of a particular sequence. A list of these sequences has been provided in file DOCUMENT/SEQ_SDC_PLUTO.TAB. N.B. Some sequences provided may have no corresponding observations. For a list of observations, refer to the data set index table. This is typically INDEX.TAB initially in the INDEX/ area of the data set. There is also a file SLIMINDX.TAB in INDEX/ that summarizes key information relevant to each observation, including which sequence was in effect and what target was likely intended for the observation. Version ======= This is VERSION 2.0 of this data set. The pipeline (see Processing below) was re-run on these data for each version since the first (V1.0). As a result, ancillary information, such as observational geometry and time (SPICE), may be updated. This will affect, for example, the calibration of the data if parameters such as the velocity or orientation of the target relative to the instrument, or the recorded target itself, have changed. See the following sections for details of what has changed over each version since the first (V1.0). Note that even if this is not a calibrated data set, the calibration changes are listed as the data will have been re-run and there will be updates to the calibration files, to the documentation (Science Operations Center - Instrument Interface Control Document: SOC_INST_ICD) and to the steps required to calibrate the data. SDC updates for Pluto Encounter Data Sets V2.0 ============== This P2 Pluto Encounter dataset release provides updates to the Pluto dataset between P1 (data on the ground by 7/31/2015) and P2 (data on the ground by 1/31/2016). All liens from the initial Pluto delivery have also now been resolved. For SDC, most of the Pluto Encounter data was downlinked in the 15229 load in August 2015. Since then, SDC has stayed on and taken data continuously, however due to power restrictions it has frequently been turned off anytime there was a downlink of SSR Side 2 data. The channels are also turned off and on around the start of certain DSN tracks, occurring about every 3 days (these tracks are known as tweakups). Processing ========== The data in this data set were created by a software data processing pipeline on the Science Operations Center (SOC) at the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), Department of Space Operations. This SOC pipeline assembled data as FITS files from raw telemetry packets sent down by the spacecraft and populated the data labels with housekeeping and engineering values, and computed geometry parameters using SPICE kernels. The pipeline did not resample the data. SDC data calibration is a two-step process: raw data numbers from a particle impact are converted to a charge, and the charge is converted to a particle mass via the ground calibrations obtained at a dust acceleration facility. Refer to the provided documentation for more information. The latest calibration procedure is described in James et al., (2010) [JAMESETAL2010]. Data ==== The observations in this data set are stored in data files using standard Flexible Image Transport System (FITS) format. Each FITS file has a corresponding detached PDS label file, named according to a common convention. The FITS files may have image and/or table extensions. See the PDS label plus the DOCUMENT files for a description of these extensions and their contents. This Data section comprises the following sub-topics: - Filename/Product IDs - Instrument description - Other sources of information useful in interpreting these Data - Visit Description, Visit Number, and Target in the Data Labels Filename/Product IDs -------------------- The filenames and product IDs of observations adhere to a common convention e.g. SDC_0123456789_0X700_ENG.FIT ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^\__/ | | | | ^^ | | | | | | | | | +--File type (includes dot) | | | | - .FIT for FITS file | | | | - .LBL for PDS label | | | | - not part of product ID | | | | | | | +--ENG for CODMAC Level 2 data | | | SCI for CODMAC Level 3 data | | | | | +--Application ID (ApID) of the telemetry data | | packet from which the data come | | N.B. ApIDs are case-insensitive | | | +--MET (Mission Event Time) i.e. Spacecraft Clock | +--Instrument designator Note that, depending on the observation, the MET in the data filename and in the Product ID may be similar to the Mission Event Time (MET) of the actual observation acquisition, but should not be used as an analog for the acquisition time. The MET is the time that the data are transferred from the instrument to spacecraft memory and is therefore not a reliable indicator of the actual observation time. The PDS label and the index tables are better sources to use for the actual timing of any observation. The specific keywords and index table column names for which to look are * START_TIME * STOP_TIME * SPACECRAFT_CLOCK_START_COUNT * SPACECRAFT_CLOCK_STOP_COUNT Instrument Instrument designators ApIDs ** =========== ================================== ============= SDC SDC 0X700 * Not all values in this range are in this data set ** ApIDs are case insensitive There are other ApIDs that contain housekeeping values and other values. See SOC Instrument ICD (/DOCUMENT/SOC_INST_ICD.*) for more details. Here is a summary of the types of files generated by each ApID (N.B. ApIDs are case-insensitive) along with the instrument designator that go with each ApID: ApIDs Data product description/Prefix(es) ===== =================================== 0x700 - SDC Science Data/SDC Instrument description ---------------------- Refer to the following files for a description of this instrument. CATALOG SDC.CAT DOCUMENTS SDC_SSR.* SOC_INST_ICD.* NH_SDC_V###_TI.TXT (### is a version number) Other sources of information useful in interpreting these Data -------------------------------------------------------------- Refer to the following files for more information about these data NH Trajectory tables: /DOCUMENT/NH_MISSION_TRAJECTORY.* - Heliocentric SDC Field Of View definitions: /DOCUMENT/NH_FOV.* /DOCUMENT/NH_SDC_V###_TI.TXT Visit Description, Visit Number, and Target in the Data Labels --------------------------------------------------------------- The observation sequences were defined in Science Activity Planning (SAP) documents, and grouped by Visit Description and Visit Number. The SAPs are spreadsheets with one Visit Description & Number per row. A nominal target is also included on each row and included in the data labels, but does not always match with the TARGET_NAME field's value in the data labels. In some cases, the target was designated as RA,DEC pointing values in the form ``RADEC=123.45,-12.34'' indicating Right Ascension and Declination, in degrees, of the target from the spacecraft in the Earth Equatorial J2000 inertial reference frame. This indicates either that the target was either a star, or that the target's ephemeris was not loaded into the spacecraft's attitude and control system which in turn meant the spacecraft could not be pointed at the target by a body identifier and an inertial pointing value had to be specified as Right Ascension and Declination values. PDS-SBN practices do not allow putting a value like RADEC=... in the PDS TARGET_NAME keyword's value. In those cases the PDS TARGET_NAME value is set to CALIBRATION. TARGET_NAME may be N/A (Not Available or Not Applicable) for a few observations in this data set; typically that means the observation is a functional test so N/A is an appropriate entry for those targets, but the PDS user should also check the NEWHORIZONS:OBSERVATION_DESC and NEWHORIZONS:SEQUENCE_ID keywords in the PDS label, plus the provided sequence list (see Ancillary Data below) to assess the possibility that there was an intended target. Ancillary Data ============== The geometry items included in the data labels were computed using the SPICE kernels archived in the New Horizons SPICE data set, NH-X-SPICE-6-PLUTO-V1.0. Every observation provided in this data set was taken as a part of a particular sequence. A list of these sequences has been provided in file DOCUMENT/SEQ_SDC_PLUTO.TAB. In addition, the sequence identifier (ID) and description are included in the PDS label for every observation. N.B. While every observation has an associated sequence, every sequence may not have associated observations. Some sequences may have failed to execute due to spacecraft events (e.g. safing). No attempt has been made during the preparation of this data set to identify such empty sequences, so it is up to the user to compare the times of the sequences to the times of the available observations from INDEX/INDEX.TAB to identify such sequences. Time ==== There are several time systems, or units, in use in this dataset: New Horizons spacecraft MET (Mission Event Time or Mission Elapsed Time), UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), and TDB Barycentric Dynamical Time. This section will give a summary description of the relationship between these time systems. For a complete explanation of these time systems the reader is referred to the documentation distributed with the Navigation and Ancillary Information Facility (NAIF) SPICE toolkit from the PDS NAIF node, (see http://naif.jpl.nasa.gov/). The most common time unit associated with the data is the spacecraft MET. MET is a 32-bit counter on the New Horizons spacecraft that runs at a rate of about one increment per second starting from a value of zero at 19.January, 2006 18:08:02 UTC or JD2453755.256337 TDB. The leapsecond adjustment (DELTA_ET = ET - UTC) was 65.184s at NH launch, and the first three additional leapseconds occured in at the ends of December, 2009, June, 2012 and June, 2015. Refer to the NH SPICE data set, NH-J/P/SS-SPICE-6-V1.0, and the SPICE toolkit docmentation, for more details about leapseconds. The data labels for any given product in this dataset usually contain at least one pair of common UTC and MET representations of the time at the middle of the observation. Other portions of the products, for example tables of data taken over periods of up to a day or more, will only have the MET time associated with a given row of the table. For the data user's use in interpreting these times, a reasonable approximation (+/- 1s) of the conversion between Julian Day (TDB) and MET is as follows: JD TDB = 2453755.256337 + ( MET / 86399.9998693 ) For more accurate calculations the reader is referred to the NAIF/SPICE documentation as mentioned above. Reference Frame =============== Geometric Parameter Reference Frame ----------------------------------- Earth Mean Equator and Vernal Equinox of J2000 (EMEJ2000) is the inertial reference frame used to specify observational geometry items provided in the data labels. Geometric parameters are based on best available SPICE data at time of data creation. Epoch of Geometric Parameters ----------------------------- All geometric parameters provided in the data labels were computed at the epoch midway between the START_TIME and STOP_TIME label fields. Software ======== The observations in this data set are in standard FITS format with PDS labels, and can be viewed by a number of PDS-provided and commercial programs. For this reason no special software is provided with this data set. Contact Information =================== For any questions regarding the data format of the archive, contact New Horizons SDC Principal Investigator: Mihaly Horanyi, LASP, University of Colorado Mihaly Horanyi Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics University of Colorado Boulder, CO 80302-0392 USA " CONFIDENCE_LEVEL_NOTE = " Confidence Level Overview ========================= During the processing of the data in preparation for delivery with this volume, the packet data associated with each observation were used only if they passed a rigorous verification process including standard checksums. In addition, raw (Level 2) observation data for which adequate contemporary housekeeping and other ancillary data are not available may not be reduced to calibrated (Level 3) data. This issue is raised here to explain why some data products in the raw data set, NH-P-SDC-2-PLUTO-V2.0, may not have corresponding data products in the calibrated data set, NH-P-SDC-3-PLUTO-V2.0. Data coverage and quality ========================= Every observation provided in this data set was taken as a part of a particular sequence. A list of these sequences has been provided in file DOCUMENT/SEQ_SDC_PLUTO.TAB. N.B. Some sequences provided may have zero corresponding observations. Refer to the Confidence Level Overview section above for a summary of steps taken to assure data quality. For SDC, the stimulus calibration activity is known to generate false positive events in the science data. This data set includes a PDS TABLE, DOCUMENT/SDC_STIM_Vnnnn.TAB, that lists time periods when stimulus calibrations were active (several times during Launch and Jupiter mission phases, and about half an hour per year during Annual CheckOuts (ACO) in the Pluto Cruise mission phase. Eventually, the Science Operations Center (SOC) operational pipeline may be enhanced to filter individual events that occur near stimulus events. Observation descriptions in this data set catalog ================================================= Some users will expect to find descriptions of the observations in this data set here, in this Confidence Level Note. This data set follows the more common convention of placing those descriptions under the Data Set Description (above, if the user is reading this in the DATASET.CAT file) of this data set catalog. Caveat about TARGET_NAME in PDS labels and observational intent =============================================================== A fundamental truth of managing data from some spacecraft missions is that the intent of any observation is not suitable for insertion into the command stream sent to the spacecraft to execute that observation. As a result, re-attaching that intent to the data that are later downlinked is problematic at best. For New Horizons that task is made even more difficult as the only meta-data that come down with the observation is the unpredictable time of the observation. The task is made yet even more difficult because uplink personnel, who generate the command sequences and initially know the intent of each observation, are perpetually under deadlines imposed by orbital mechanics and can rarely be spared for the time-intensive task of resolving this issue. To make a long story short, the downlink team on New Horizons has created an automated system to take various uplink products, decode things like Chebyshev polynomials in command sequences representing celestial body ephemerides for use on the spacecraft to control pointing, and infer from those data what the most likely intended target was at any time during the mission. This works well during flyby encounters and less so during cruise phases and hibernation. The point to be made is that the user of these PDS data needs to be cautious when using the TARGET_NAME and other target-related parameters stored in this data set. This is less an issue for the plasma and particle instruments, more so for pointing instruments. To this end, the heliocentric ephemeris of the spacecraft, the spacecraft-relative ephemeris of the inferred target, and the inertial attitude of the instrument reference frame are provided with all data, in the J2000 inertial reference frame, so the user can check where that target is in the Field Of View (FOV) of the instrument. Furthermore, for pointing instruments with one or more spatial components to their detectors, a table has been provided in the DOCUMENT/ area with XY (two-dimensional) positions of each inferred target in the primary data products. If those values are several thousand pixels off of a detector array, it is a strong indication that the actual target of that observation is something other than the inferred target, or no target at all e.g. dark sky. Review ====== This dataset was peer reviewed and certified for scientific use on 2017-01-05. " ABSTRACT_DESC = " This data set contains Calibrated data taken by the New Horizons Student Dust Counter instrument during the Pluto encounter mission phase. This is VERSION 2.0 of this data set. This data set contains SDC observations taken during the the Approach (Jan-Jul, 2015), Encounter and Departure mission sub-phases, including flyby observations taken on 14.July, 2015, and including data through 2015 and into January, 2016; the data are limited to those downlinked from the spacecraft as of the end of January, 2016. The rest of the downlinked data for this mission phase will be delivered in a future data set. This is version 2.0 of this data set. Changes since version 1.0 include data downlinked between the end of July, 2015 and the end of January, 2016. Also, updates were made to the documentation and catalog files, primarily to resolve liens from the V1.0 peer review. " CITATION_DESC = " Horanyi, M., NEW HORIZONS Calibrated SDC PLUTO ENCOUNTER V2.0, NH-P-SDC-3-PLUTO-V2.0, NASA Planetary Data System, 2017. " DATA_OBJECT_TYPE = "TABLE" DATA_SET_COLLECTION_MEMBER_FLG = "N" DATA_SET_NAME = "NEW HORIZONS SDC PLUTO ENCOUNTER CALIBRATED V2.0" DATA_SET_RELEASE_DATE = 2016-10-31 DATA_SET_TERSE_DESC = " Calibrated data taken by New Horizons Student Dust Counter instrument during the PLUTO mission phase. This is VERSION 2.0 of this data set. " DETAILED_CATALOG_FLAG = "N" PRODUCER_FULL_NAME = "BRIAN CARCICH" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_INFORMATION OBJECT = DATA_SET_MISSION MISSION_NAME = "NEW HORIZONS" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_MISSION OBJECT = DATA_SET_REFERENCE_INFORMATION REFERENCE_KEY_ID = "JAMESETAL2010" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_REFERENCE_INFORMATION OBJECT = DATA_SET_REFERENCE_INFORMATION REFERENCE_KEY_ID = "BAGENALETAL2016" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_REFERENCE_INFORMATION OBJECT = DATA_SET_TARGET TARGET_NAME = "DUST" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_TARGET OBJECT = DATA_SET_HOST INSTRUMENT_HOST_ID = "NH" INSTRUMENT_ID = "SDC" END_OBJECT = DATA_SET_HOST END_OBJECT = DATA_SET END