Thus, the resource being requested in a Reservation
must always be specified. Fourth, through the use of
ANDs and ONE-OFs, the multiple telescope schedul-
ing problem contains one type of logical scheduling-
time dependencies between reservations.
For the purposes of the LCOGT scheduler, we are
interested in the offline version of the telescope net-
work scheduling problem, that is, the version in which
the full list of Compound Reservations is provided at
the outset. Thus, we seek algorithms that take as in-
put a list of Compound Reservations and return one
or more consistent schedules that maximise the sum
priority of the scheduled Reservations. In practice,
such an algorithm will be wrapped in a control algo-
rithm that triggers the re-calculation of the schedule
in response to observation failure, resource availabil-
ity changes, requests for near-real-time observations
and other user actions, which can be thought of as
changes to the input list.
5 SUMMARY
In this paper we have described a formalism that
allows astronomers to express their complex scien-
tific needs and preferences regarding resource and
time allocation on a telescope network. This formal-
ism serves as the assembly language into which even
higher-level descriptions of astronomers’ needs can
be translated.
REFERENCES
Akerlof, C. W., Kehoe, R. L., McKay, T. A., Rykoff, E. S.,
Smith, D. A., Casperson, D. E., McGowan, K. E.,
Vestrand, W. T., Wozniak, P. R., Wren, J. A., Ashley,
M. C. B., Phillips, M. A., Marshall, S. L., Epps, H. W.,
and Schier, J. A. (2003). The ROTSE-III Robotic
Telescope System. Publications of The Astronomical
Society of the Pacific, 115:132–140.
Allan, A., Naylor, T., and Saunders, E. S. (2006). The eS-
TAR network agent architectures for astronomy. As-
tronomische Nachrichten, 327(8):767–770.
Bakos, G.
´
A., Hartman, J. D., Torres, G., Kov´acs, G.,
Noyes, R. W., Latham, D. W., Sasselov, D. D., and
B´eky, B. (2011). Planets from the HATNet project. In
European Physical Journal Web of Conferences, vol-
ume 11 of European Physical Journal Web of Confer-
ences, page 1002.
Barbulescu, L., paul Watson, J., Whitley, L. D., and Howe,
A. E. (2004). Scheduling space-ground communica-
tions for the air force satellite control network. Jour-
nal of Scheduling, 7:7–34.
Brown, T., Rosing, W. E., Baliber, N., Hidas, M., and Street,
R. (2007). Surveys, Temporal Variability, and the Las
Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope. In Amer-
ican Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #210,
volume 39 of Bulletin of the American Astronomical
Society, page 173.
Colome, J., Casteels, K., Ribas, I., and Francisco, X.
(2010). The TJO-OAdM Robotic Observatory: the
scheduler. volume 7740, page 77403K. SPIE.
Frank, J., J´onsson, A., Morris, R., and Smith, D. E. (2001).
Planning and scheduling for fleets of earth observing
satellites. In in: Proceedings of Sixth Int. Symp. on Ar-
tificial Intelligence, Robotics, Automation and Space.
Fraser, S. N. (2006). Scheduling for robonet-1 homoge-
nous telescope network. Astronomische Nachrichten,
327(8):779–782.
Hessman, F. V. (2006). Prospects for a global Hetero-
geneous Telescope Network (HTN). Astronomische
Nachrichten, 327:763.
Kinzel, W. M. (2010). Jwst planning and scheduling opera-
tions and concepts. volume 7737, page 77370Y. SPIE.
Lee, S., Turner, J., Daskin, M. S., de Mello, T. H., and
Smilowitz, K. (2012). Improving fleet utilization for
carriers by interval scheduling. European Journal of
Operational Research, 218(1):261 – 269.
Martinez, J. J., Brown, T. M., Conway, P., Elphick, M.,
Falarski, M., Hawkins, E., Rosing, W., and Shob-
brook, J. (2010). Lcogt sites and site operations. vol-
ume 7737, page 77370O. SPIE.
Nather, R. E., Winget, D. E., Clemens, J. C., Hansen, C. J.,
and Hine, B. P. (1990). The whole earth telescope - A
new astronomical instrument. Astrophysical Journal,
361:309–317.
Saunders, E. S., Naylor, T., and Allan, A. (2006). Optimal
placement of a limited number of observations for pe-
riod searches. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 455:757–
763.
Snodgrass, C., Tsapras, Y., Street, R., Bramich, D., Horne,
K., Dominik, M., and Allan, A. (2008). The WEB-
plop observation prioritisation system. In Manchester
Microlensing Conference.
Tsapras, Y., Street, R., Horne, K., Snodgrass, C., Do-
minik, M., Allan, A., Steele, I., Bramich, D., Saun-
ders, E., Rattenbury, N., Mottram, C., Fraser, S., Clay,
N., Burgdorf, M., Bode, M., Lister, T., Hawkins, E.,
Beaulieu, J., Fouqu, P., Albrow, M., Menzies, J., Cas-
san, A., and Dominis-Prester, D. (2009). RoboNet-
II: Follow-up observations of microlensing events
with a robotic network of telescopes. Astronomische
Nachrichten, 330(1):4–11.
Vestrand, W. T., Borozdin, K. N., Brumby, S. P., Casperson,
D. E., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M. C., McGowan, K.,
Perkins, S. J., Priedhorsky, W. C., Starr, D., White,
R., Wozniak, P., and Wren, J. A. (2002). The RAP-
TOR experiment: a system for monitoring the opti-
cal sky in real time. In Kibrick, R. I., editor, Society
of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Conference Series, volume 4845 of Society of Photo-
Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference
Series, pages 126–136.
TelescopeNetworkScheduling-RationaleandFormalisms
169