= Copilot = `copilot.py` is a script that watches for new images, measures them, and produces a plot, `recent.png` to help observers understand what the conditions are doing. Start it from the `mzls@mayall-idl.kpno.noao.edu` account, {{{ cd ~/obsbot python copilot.py & eog recent.png & }}} It will monitor the $MOS3_DATA directory, and whenever a new image comes it, it will measure it, update a little database, and create a "strip plot" showing the conditions. The database is in *~/obsbot/obsdb/obsdb.sqlite3*. An example plot is shown here: [[Image(recent.png)]] The top panel shows the seeing. Any problems with the data we know how to detect are marked with red vertical bands. These include: * readtime -- MAY indicate a duplicated image ("md5sum" is a better indicator). * md5sum -- this image contains identical pixels as a previous image. This requires action! Please see the problem description [[https://desi.lbl.gov/trac/wiki/PublicPages/MayallZbandLegacy/NotesforObservers/Problems#a5.Repeatimages HERE]]. * pixcnt -- the image readout is shifted. Please have a look at this exposure and note in the logs which CCD has the shift. The shifts are pretty easily recognized in the *mscexam* IRAF window -- blocks of one of the images will be shifted to the left or right. Do not stop observing. This problem is described [[https://desi.lbl.gov/trac/wiki/PublicPages/MayallZbandLegacy/NotesforObservers/Problems#a4.Shiftedimages here]] * (unlabelled bar) -- it has been a while since the last image has been seen. Have images stopped being written? See problem description [[https://desi.lbl.gov/trac/wiki/PublicPages/MayallZbandLegacy/NotesforObservers/Problems#a0.Noimagesbeingwritten here]] The second panel shows the Sky brightness. The "nominal" brightness is shown by the magenta horizontal line. In this panel, the pass number of previous exposures is shown. (This corresponds to the pass we thought the image was going to be, not what the actual conditions delivered.) The "transparency" panel shows what fraction of the light from stars is getting through the atmosphere to us. Around 90% usually indicates clear photometric conditions. The "exposure time" panel is complicated. The hollow black dots show the actual exposure time of the images we took. The magenta dots show the exposure time we should have taken, given the measured conditions in that image; it's post-facto what we should have done. We have lower and upper bounds on the exposure times, 80 and 250 seconds. If the "post-facto" target exposure time is below or above the bounds, it is shown with a triangle, and a circle will also be plotted at the lower or upper bound line. The "depth factor" plot just shows our actual exposure time divided by the post-facto target exposure time. 1 indicates that we're doing exactly what we should be doing. Greater than 1 indicates we're over-exposing, and less than 1 indicates that we're under-exposing. The vertical labels show the exposure numbers. Note that zeros and focus frames will not show up on the plot.