ANCHORS: An archive of chandra Observations of fegions of star formation (original) (raw)

Foreword to the eWiC Proceedings of Astronomical Data Analysis III

Our computing infrastructure is currently undergoing a qualitative and quantitative sea-change, and this goes hand in hand with the rise of the virtual organisation. The virtual organisation–a commercial firm, a branch of government, or a non-profit consortium–is one that transcends a particular geographic location, and specified time-intervals of the day. Virtual organisations are brought about in both top-down and in bottom-up ways: both by globalisation and mobile working, and also by net-centric operations.

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 189:37–82, 2010 July doi:10.1088/0067-0049/189/1/37 C © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. THE CHANDRA SOURCE CATALOG

2016

The Chandra Source Catalog (CSC) is a general purpose virtual X-ray astrophysics facility that provides access to a carefully selected set of generally useful quantities for individual X-ray sources, and is designed to satisfy the needs of a broad-based group of scientists, including those who may be less familiar with astronomical data analysis in the X-ray regime. The first release of the CSC includes information about 94,676 distinct X-ray sources detected in a subset of public Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer imaging observations from roughly the first eight years of the Chandra mission. This release of the catalog includes point and compact sources with observed spatial extents 30′′. The catalog (1) provides access to the best estimates of the X-ray source properties for detected sources, with good scientific fidelity, and directly supports scientific analysis using the individual source data; (2) facilitates analysis of a wide range of statistical properties for classes of X-...

Highlights of Astronomy. Volume 12, as presented at the XXIVth General Assembly of the IAU - 2000

2002

Contents: Preface. I. Invited discourse. II. Joint discussions - 1. Atomic and molecular data for astrophysics: new developments, case studies and future needs. 2. Models and constants for sub-microarcsecond astrometry. 3. Massive star birth. 4. The transneptunian population. 5. Mixing and diffusion in stars: theoretical predictions and observational constraints. 6. Applied historical astronomy. 7. The Sun and space weather. 8. Oxygen abundances in old stars and implications to nucleosynthesis and cosmology. 9. Cold gas and dust at high redshift. 10. Cluster mergers and their connection to radio sources. 11. First results to the FUSE mission. 12. Highlights of planetary exploration from space and from Earth. 13. HIPPARCOS and the luminosity calibration of the nearer stars. 14. The origins of galactic magnetic fields. III. Special session: Astronomy for developing countries.

Science with the Virtual Observatory: the AstroGrid VO Desktop

2009

) and show how to pass the various results into any VO enabled tool such as TopCat for catalogue correlation. VOExplorer offers a powerful data-centric visualisation for browsing and filtering the entire VO registry using an iTunes type interface. This allows the user to bookmark their own personalised lists of resources and to run tasks on the selected resources as desired. We introduce an example of how more advanced querying can be performed to access existing X-ray cluster of galaxies catalogues and then select extended only X-ray sources as candidate clusters of galaxies in the 2XMMi catalogue. Finally we introduce scripted access to VO resources using python with AstroGrid and demonstrate how the user can pass on the results of such a search and correlate with e.g. optical datasets such as Sloan. Hence we illustrate the power of enabling large scale data mining of multi wavelength resources in an easily reproducible way using the VO.