Below you see the LMI Camera Control view which is the primary way for controlling and commanding the LMI. In addition to direct control of the CCD, some other functions related to the instrument can be performed from this view for convenience. For instance, the TCS Offset commands can also be issued by the TOs on the TCS control panel but it is probably more convenient for the astronomer to issue them directly. The main functions available in this view are:
Tooltips are available for most fields.
The top section of the view allows the observer to setup and initiate an exposure command. The most common parameters for the exposure command are exposed in this view but for full control of the CCD, one needs to go to the Engineering Mode Control view.
The top row contains the buttons for initiating or stopping the exposure:
The text fields are self-explanatory. One thing to remember is that subframe = 0
means full frame.
This section of the view allows selection of the filter and issuing the move command. LMI has two filter wheels with 10 positions in each. Position 1 is reserved for HOME and is OPEN. The filter wheels move in in one direction only and the motion of the two are in the opposite directions. For instance in the lower filter wheel, moving from 1 to 2 is a short relative move of 1 position. On the upper filter wheel the same move is a long relative move of 9 positions.
Below each filter wheel widget there are labels for demand and current position along with the status of the detent. Each filter position will also display a tooltip:
There are also 2 check boxes which are checked by default:
There are also 6 buttons associated with the filter moves:
The AOS focus command is an accordion UI element (collapsible content) which allows the observer to send a focus offset command to the AOS. This can be used after the focus script has run and one does not agree with the value that is automatically sent. It can also be used to set the general focus offset of 750 microns while in OPEN, OPEN or to correct the offset if the filter wheel gets lost.
The offset command in the TCS is absolute and has three modes; TPLANE, SIMPLE, and PA. The tooltips on the labels show the appropriate units for each parameter. The relative offset command is a LOUI implementation by issuing an absorb command immediately after the offset command. Sending the clear
command is equivalent to sending 0,0 as the parameters.
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