Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Today is Calibration Maneuver Day!

SDO will perform two calibration maneuvers today. The EVE field of view maneuver will run from 1315-1557 UTC (9:15 am-1:57 pm ET) and HMI/AIA Flatfield will run from 1630-1907 UTC (2:30-5:07 pm ET). SDO science data will not be available from 1315-1910 UTC (9:15 am-5:10 pm ET), although the AIA near-realtime images on the SDO website will show the Sun running back and forth across the images.

Monday, October 12, 2015

Another Lunar Transit Today

SDO will see another lunar transit today from 1718 UTC (1:18 p.m. ET) until 1733 UTC (1:33 p.m. ET). Although this is a very short transit, the Moon will occult part of the fine guidance system in AIA so we will turn off the fine guidance during the transit. That means the AIA images will drift a little and the HMI Dopplergrams and magnetograms will not be created.

Friday, October 9, 2015

SDO Website is back up

The maintenance on the SDO web and data servers is complete the website is back up and running normally. Thank you.

SDO website is undergoing maintenance

The SDO web and data servers are undergoing maintenance and will be unavailable for a time. We apologize for any inconvenience. We will send out a message as soon as our servers are back up.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

The First Maneuver of the First SDO Extended Mission

On October 1, 2015, SDO began the First SDO Extended Mission. The SDO Team submitted a proposal to NASA in March to continue observing the Sun for another two years. The proposal was approved and we began the extended mission on October 1.

With the extended mission comes calibration maneuvers. The first is an EVE cruciform today from 1800 UTC (2:00 p.m. ET) until 2230 UTC (6:30 p.m. ET). SDO science data will not available during the maneuver but the AIA images on the SDO website will look like the Sun is zooming around in space.

Congratulations to the SDO Team for the successful proposal and winning another two years of watching the Sun and solar activity!