Reengineering observatory operations for the time domain
Robert L. Seaman, W. Thomas Vestrand, Frederic V. Hessman

TL;DR
The paper discusses the need to reengineer observatory operations to adapt to the rapid technological and organizational changes in the astronomical community, emphasizing systems engineering for integrated, efficient workflows.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of a holistic systems engineering approach to redesign observatory operations amidst evolving technologies and collaborative networks.
Findings
Observatories are increasingly complex and interconnected.
Current workflows are outdated and need comprehensive redesign.
Systems engineering can improve efficiency and scientific output.
Abstract
Observatories are complex scientific and technical institutions serving diverse users and purposes. Their telescopes, instruments, software, and human resources engage in interwoven workflows over a broad range of timescales. These workflows have been tuned to be responsive to concepts of observatory operations that were applicable when various assets were commissioned, years or decades in the past. The astronomical community is entering an era of rapid change increasingly characterized by large time domain surveys, robotic telescopes and automated infrastructures, and - most significantly - of operating modes and scientific consortia that span our individual facilities, joining them into complex network entities. Observatories must adapt and numerous initiatives are in progress that focus on redesigning individual components out of the astronomical toolkit. New instrumentation is…
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