WISE will generally be observing a semi-circle at an ecliptic longitude
95o larger than the ecliptic longitude of the Sun (blue
curve below), and another semi-circle at an ecliptic longitude
90o smaller than the ecliptic longitude of the Sun (red
curve below). The asymmetry allows WISE to recover from a brief safing
event by decreasing the ecliptic longitude of the scan circles by
1o per day of duration for the safing event. This does not
cause WISE to scan any closer to the Sun.
The yellow region shows the actual survey interval, from 1 month after the 7 Dec 2009 launch date to 10 months after launch.
It should be possible to predict the dates a source will be observed by computing its ecliptic longitude, adding a ±0.4o/cos(latitude) range, and then finding the date(s) when the above curves are in the source's ecliptic longitude range. This gives the best estimate available until we know the orbit after launch, but remember that safing events could delay the survey by up to 5 days.