Re: [Fwd: VOTimeSeries]

From: Enrique Solano Marquez <esm-at-laeff.inta.es>
Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2007 15:32:29 +0200


Dear Roy, Dal and DM People,

Please find below a brief description of a service providing light curves in the VO.

Hoping this helps,

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Enrique Solano
LAEFF-Spanish VO
P.O. Box 78,
28691 Villanueva de la Caņada,
Madrid, Spain.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------

OMC VO Service of Light Curves

In mid 2006 the LAEFF/Spanish Virtual Observatory registered the OMC SSA service. This service provides access to the light curves produced by the OMC camera on board INTEGRAL.

The OMC SSA service may be found at:
http://sdc.laeff.inta.es/omc/jsp/ssap.jsp

It mainly makes use of the SSAP protocol Version 0.91 and Spectrum Data Model Version 0.95. However it will be adapted to the new recommendations in the near future.

The service may be queried by several input parameters: the standard POS and SIZE parameters, object name (any of the registered in SIMBAD), sampling time, centroid method, minimum desired number of points in the resulting light curves, temporal coverage... An example of a typical query may be found here:
http://sdc.laeff.inta.es/omc/jsp/ssap.jsp?pos=10,10&size=5

The service return a VOTable with standard information such as the title of the observation, name of the target, coordinates, time bounds, and number of samples. The URL of each data product is also provided. The data products consists of a VOTable containing the light curve and all the relevant information about it. Here is an example of a light curve returned by the system:
http://sdc.laeff.inta.es:80/omc/secure/fetch_lcurve.jsp?obj_id=9800&lct_id=0001&output_format=votable

In this data products much of the information defined by the Spectrum Data Model for time series may be found: the time and flux axis, information about the system used for the time axis (time type, equal to MJD, zero point of timescale, reference position) and for the flux axis, exposure time, coordinate system, bandpass of the instrument, etc...


> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Subject:
> VOTimeSeries
> From:
> Roy Williams <roy-at-cacr.caltech.edu>
> Date:
> Sun, 10 Jun 2007 08:23:37 -0700
> To:
> "dal-at-ivoa.net" <dal-at-ivoa.net>, "dm-at-ivoa.net" <dm-at-ivoa.net>
>
> To:
> "dal-at-ivoa.net" <dal-at-ivoa.net>, "dm-at-ivoa.net" <dm-at-ivoa.net>
>
>
> Dear Dal and DM People
>
> At a meeting last week, a small group of influential astronomers sat
> down to build a "simple and effective common format for Time Series".
> Something like magnitude vs time for a source. Of course I told them
> about all the work in the Virtual Observatory, but they said those
> standards are too complicated and they just want something simple. Then
> the discussion showed that time series are complicated things and there
> was a fistfight over leap seconds etc etc ...
>
> So I write to ask for an actual example of a Time Series that is written
> with the Spectrum and/or Characterization data models. Something that is
> simple, just a few magnitudes and times. Does anybody have such a thing
> that I can send around to these astronomers and say "look how useful the
> IVOA standards can be!".
>
> Thank you
> Roy
>
>
Received on 2007-06-29Z15:33:23