(updated Jan 2019)
Because SOAR is an Alt-Az telescope, it cannot track objects at zenith. The telescope has the following limits in elevation:
(updated 30 Mar 2016)
Overheads depend on many issues, like how widely distributed your targets are on the sky and what instrument/configuration you are using. However, for the guidance of the user when preparing the observations, we post here some general figures:
1) Overheads due to Telescope+Dome+Nasmyth Rotator: For all-sky slews the average overhead is 2.4min. This is from the moment the Telescope Operator selects a new target, to the moment the telescope is guiding on its next field. If you are moving from object to object on the same part of the sky (a few degrees) this overhead goes down to ~1min. However, even in all-sky mode you may have as little as 1m25s of overhead or as much as nearly 5min. This depends on whether you moved 20 deg in azimuth but at roughly the same elevation or if you are now pointing to the other direction of the sky, and going from a low elevation to a high elevation, such that not only the telescope has to slew over ~180 deg, but the main mirror optics have to readjust for the large change in elevation, and the Nasmyth rotator may have to move by a large amount.
2) Instrument Overheads.
2.1) Goodman Spectrograph (GHTS) [1] + Goodman Acquisition Camera (GACAM) [2] = ~ 1min. This is the recommended mode for acquiring targets in spectroscopic mode down to V~18 in fields which are not crowded. Average acquisition time is ~1min (from the moment the Telescope Operator has locked on a guide star, to the moment you click on the Start Exposure button). The GACAM also provides savings in time by doing away with the need to move anything other than the slit positioner, including avoiding changing the readout mode when going between imaging and spectroscopic mode.
2.2) Goodman Spectrograph (GHTS) [1]+ Pre-imaging = ~ 6 min. This is the original acquisition mode of the GHTS. It the default mode for observations in Multi-Object Slit (MOS) mode, and recommended for very faint, specially extended objects, or very crowded fields. In this mode an image of the target is first obtained in Imaging Mode, then an Image of the slit (or slit mask in MOS mode), in order to calculate the offset between object and slit. Usually a third image is done to make sure the target is well centered on the slit.
The whole process, assuming 20s exposures and a 20s readout (in 400 kHz ATTN0 fast readout mode, and selecting a smaller region of the CCD to read) if done efficiently, requires on average ~6min.
2.3 ) SOAR Adaptive Optics Module (SAM) [3]. This instrument uses its own guiders, and requires a pre-image to determine a precise offset so the small field-of-view guiders (~10x10 arcsec) can zero in on any selected guide star. The overhead from one target to the next, assuming they are in the same part of the sky, is ~6min.
Therefore, if observing with Goodman + GACAM, estimate ~1min overhead per target. For Goodman + pre-maging, stimate average overheads of ~6min per target (~8-10 min if you want to be conservative or have little experience with the instrument). With SAM, ~6-7min.
There are several good practices when observing with SOAR that will help you minimize the overheads:
Links
[1] http://www.ctio.noirlab.edu/soar/content/goodman-high-throughput-spectrograph
[2] http://www.ctio.noirlab.edu/soar/content/goodman-acquisition-camera-gacam
[3] http://www.ctio.noirlab.edu/soar/content/soar-adaptive-optics-module-sam